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Intratumoral Gemcitabine, Paclitaxel, Carboplatine and Intravenous Nivolumab for Locally Recurrence of Head and Neck Cancers
Sponsor: Centre Hospitalier Universitaire, Amiens
Summary
Patients with locally recurrent squamous-cell carcinoma of the head and neck (SCCHN) after Chemotherapy and immunotherapy have a very poor prognosis and limited therapeutic options. Intratumoral chemotherapy (ITC) with cisplatin and epinephrine in order to increase the local cisplatin retention lead to a 50 % response rate in several studies but was given up due to the poor local tolerance with frequent necrosis of the peritumoral tissues. Gemcitabine, carboplatin and paclitaxel (GCP) are used in advanced SCCHN. These chemotherapies seem to be interesting options for intratumoral infusion: their different effect could lead to avoid chemotherapy resistance with a good tolerance profile, without tissue necrosis profile. The other major option for recurrent SCCHN is immunotherapy by Nivolumab, an anti PD-1 with a 13% mediane response rate. Nevertheless, the failure of this treatment stay unclear, but immunosuppressive action of the tumour is suspected. The presence of tumoral antigen could lead to better response to immunotherapy; association of chemotherapy and immunotherapy seems a promosing association to avoid treatment resistance as cytotoxic release tumoral antigen; it could also be associated to an abscopal effect. The aim of the study is to evaluate the efficacy of ITC using GCP in LOCAL recurrent SCCHN treated by nivolumab.
Key Details
Gender
All
Age Range
18 Years - Any
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Enrollment
39
Start Date
2025-11
Completion Date
2027-04
Last Updated
2025-03-21
Healthy Volunteers
No
Interventions
GCP intratumoral catheter
After local anaesthesia, intratumoral catheter will be place (one or several depending tumour criteria).The catheter placement could be guided by radiological imaging. Gemcitabine (200mg/l), carboplatin (100mg/l) and paclitaxel (20mg/l) will be each diluted in each in 160ml of NaCl0.9%. GCP will be administered successively for 8hours, at 20ml/h with a total duration of 24hours. The ITC will be done every 28 days for 6 times maximum in case of good response and tolerance. Nivolumab 240 mg IV will be started 1 to 7 days before the first intratumoral infusion and every 15 days, until progression or 2 until years in case of partial response, complete response or stabilization. Evaluation of tumour size will be done by CT-scan, or MRI 2every 2 months and PET-FDG every 3 months.
Locations (1)
CHU Amiens Picardie
Amiens, Picardie, France