Phase II study of ERC1671 plus bevacizumab versus bevacizumab plus placebo in recurrent glioblastoma: interim results and correlations with CD4 T-lymphocyte counts

PMID: 30157683
Journal: CNS oncology (volume: 7, issue: 3, CNS Oncol 2018 07;7(3):CNS22)
Published: 2018-08-29

Authors:
Bota DA, Chung J, Dandekar M, Carrillo JA, Kong XT, Fu BD, Hsu FP, Schönthal AH, Hofman FM, Chen TC, Zidovetzki R, Pretto C, Strik A, Schijns VE, Stathopoulos A

ABSTRACT

AIM: ERC1671 is an allogeneic/autologous therapeutic glioblastoma (GBM) vaccine – composed of whole, inactivated tumor cells mixed with tumor cell lysates derived from the patient and three GBM donors.

METHODS: In this double-blinded, randomized, Phase II study bevacizumab-naive patients with recurrent GBM were randomized to receive either ERC1671 in combination with granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF) (Leukine or sargramostim) and cyclophosphamide plus bevacizumab, or placebo plus bevacizumab. Interim results: Median overall survival (OS) of patients treated with ERC1671 plus bevacizumab was 12 months. In the placebo plus bevacizumab group, median OS was 7.5 months. The maximal CD4 T-lymphocyte count correlated with OS in the ERC1671 but not in the placebo group.

CONCLUSION: The addition of ERC1671/GM-CSF/cyclophosphamide to bevacizumab resulted in a clinically meaningful survival benefit with minimal additional toxicity.