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RECRUITING
NCT06738797

Association Between the SPHERTEST in Vitro Test and Response to Checkpoint Inhibitor Treatments in Patients With Advanced or Metastatic Urothelial Carcinoma

Sponsor: Centre Hospitalier Universitaire de Nīmes

View on ClinicalTrials.gov

Summary

First-line systemic treatments for bladder cancer are based on a combination of cytotoxic and immunotherapy, sequentially or concomitantly. Immune checkpoint inhibition (ICPI) is a powerful treatment for patients with metastatic urothelial carcinoma (UC). Since 2017, pembrolizumab (anti-PD1) can be offered as a second-line treatment after failure of platinum agents. In patients responding to platinum salts in first-line treatment, it is possible to maintain efficacy with maintenance treatment with another ICPI, avelumab (anti-PDL1). The phase III JAVELIN BLADDER 100 study compared avelumab to supportive care alone after successful platinum-based chemotherapy. At 30 months, 19.3% of patients were still in response compared to only 6.3% in the supportive care arm. However, biomarker analysis on tumor tissue did not show a robust signature on an individual scale. Recently, two phase 3 trials in first-line were presented at the ESMO 2023 congress. The first, in patients who could receive cisplatin-based chemotherapy, found a benefit on overall survival of adding Nivolumab in combination and then maintaining it for two years. The second proposed combined Enfortumab Vedotin and Pembrolizumab versus standard chemotherapy, with an overall survival for the study arm of more than 31 months. These trials confirm the essential role of immunotherapy in urothelial carcinomas. This progress is tempered by toxicity, cost and the lack of data on patient selection and treatment sequence. Although "prognostic" biomarkers have been identified, they cannot guide the choice of therapy, but only predict the expected outcomes, regardless of the treatment; biomarkers capable of predicting clinical benefit ("predictive") are urgently needed. It is therefore essential to identify a predictive signature at the individual level. The study authors have validated an in vitro model of heterotypic spheroids (SPHERTEST) composed of commercial urothelial carcinoma tumor cells and PBMCs from healthy donors. The aim of the study is to validate this model with PBMCs from UC patients to evaluate the effects of immunotherapy on the immune response and on tumor cell survival in vitro. The study hypothesis is that the outcome of the pre-therapeutic test based on a heterotypic spheroid model with PBMC from patients with advanced or metastatic urothelial carcinoma (SPHERTEST) is related to the response to checkpoint inhibitor (CI) treatment.

Official title: Evaluation de l'Association Entre Les résultats d'un Test in Vitro en Cours de développement (SPHERTEST) et la réponse Aux Traitements Par Inhibiteur du Point de contrôle Chez Des Patients Atteints de Carcinome urothélial de Stade avancé ou métastatique.

Key Details

Gender

All

Age Range

18 Years - Any

Study Type

OBSERVATIONAL

Enrollment

32

Start Date

2024-12-12

Completion Date

2029-06

Last Updated

2026-01-28

Healthy Volunteers

No

Interventions

DIAGNOSTIC_TEST

SPHERTEST test

The SPHERETEST is an in vitro model of heterotypic spheroids composed of commercial urothelial carcinoma tumor cells and leukocyte mononuclear cells from healthy donors.

Locations (5)

Institut du Cancer de Montpellier

Montpellier, France

Institut Régional du Cancer de Montpellier

Montpellier, France

Centre Antoine Lacassagne

Nice, France

CHU de Nimes

Nîmes, France

Iuct Oncopole

Toulouse, France