QL1706 Plus Chemotherapy as Neoadjuvant Therapy for Locally Advanced Cervical Cancer: A Phase II Trial
Cervical cancer ranks as the second most common malignancy of the female genital tract. According to the World Health Organization, there are 530,000 new cases and approximately 250,000 cervical-cancer-related deaths worldwide each year, with 80% of these deaths occurring in women from developing countries. Early-stage disease can be managed surgically, whereas advanced or recurrent cervical cancer is treated with individualized multimodal therapy; nevertheless, the optimal management of locally advanced cervical cancer (FIGO 2018 stage IB3-IIA2) remains controversial. Chemoradiation is standard, but neoadjuvant chemotherapy followed by radical surgery after tumor down-staging is also used. More than 90% of cervical cancers are driven by persistent infection with high-risk human papillomavirus (HPV), which evades host immunity in part by up-regulating PD-L1 on tumor cells. Published series report PD-L1 positivity in 34.4-96% of cervical cancers, with even higher rates in squamous-cell histology, providing a rationale for PD-1/PD-L1 blockade. QL1706, a novel bispecific immunotherapeutic agent, has recently been approved as monotherapy for second-line treatment of advanced cervical cancer.QL1706, developed by Qilu Pharmaceutical using the proprietary MabPair™ platform, is the first bispecific antibody simultaneously targeting PD-1 and CTLA-4, showing synergistic anti-tumor activity and favorable tolerability.Unlike previous phase II/III trials of PD-1 monotherapy, this study does not restrict enrolment to patients with PD-L1-positive tumors, so QL1706 is expected to confer benefit in the second-line management of recurrent or metastatic cervical cancer. Therefore, investigating QL1706-based combination regimens as neoadjuvant treatment for treatment-naïve disease is also highly relevant and may improve outcomes in women with locally advanced cervical cancer.
Gender: FEMALE
Ages: 18 Years - 70 Years
Neoadjuvant Treatment for Locally Advanced Cervical Cancer