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Trials / Recruiting

RecruitingNCT06401824

Sacituzumab Govitecan and Bevacizumab for NSCLC Brain Metastases

A Single Arm Phase II Study Evaluating Intracranial Efficacy of Sacituzumab Govitecan (SG) With Bevacizumab in Patients With Active, Asymptomatic Brain Metastases From Non-small Cell Lung Cancer (NSCLC)

Status
Recruiting
Phase
Phase 2
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
25 (estimated)
Sponsor
Maastricht University Medical Center · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

This study will evaluate whether the combination of sacituzumab govitecan (SG) and bevacizumab will result in shrinkage of brain metastases from patients with non-squamous non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC), with disease progression on chemotherapy and immunotherapy.

Detailed description

Historically, the prognosis for patients with non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) brain metastases (BM) was poor, but this paradigm is slowly shifting as current data with an immune checkpoint inhibitor (ICI) based regimen show that a subgroup of patients with BM can achieve long-term survival. For patients with disease progression in the brain after platinum-doublet chemotherapy and ICI, no good systemic treatment options exist and due to local treatments, systemic therapy is often delayed. Of note, most of these patients also have extra-cranial disease progression which needs to be treated. The current standard of care post chemo-ICI progression is docetaxel, with dismal outcomes. The same holds true for patients with NSCLC with an actionable genomic alteration. Upon exhaustion of targeted therapies and platinum-doublet chemotherapy with or without ICI, the standard of care is docetaxel with the same dismal outcomes. Therefore, new systemic therapies that are active systemically as well as intracranially are needed in this population. Antibody-drug-conjugates (ADC) are promising new drugs and several have entered testing in randomized phase III trials. In the majority of the trials evaluating ADCs, patients with untreated BM were excluded. Importantly, Sacituzumab Govitecan (SG), a TROP2-ADC, achieves therapeutic concentrations of SN-38, the active payload of SG, in the CNS. SG is evaluated versus docetaxel in the ongoing EVOKE-1 trial (NCT05089734) but patients with untreated BM are excluded. Preclinically, SG combined with bevacizumab, but not with cetuximab, significantly improved survival over SG alone. Bevacizumab combined with chemotherapy results in an impressive intracranial ORR of 61%. Of note, a possible pseudo response (a marked decrease in contrast enhancement and oedema on MR imaging that often occurs after the initiation of bevacizumab therapy, attributed to normalization of the blood-brain barrier), was not taken into account. Pharmacokinetic drug-drug interactions between bevacizumab and SG are not expected given the distinct proteolytic catabolism responsible for degradation of each monoclonal antibody (moiety). In addition, SN-38 is metabolized by UGT1A1, which is not affected by bevacizumab. Based on the data above, it is of interest to also evaluate SG combined with bevacizumab in patients with BM from NSCLC. This will be evaluated in patients with non-squamous non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC), with disease progression on chemotherapy and immunotherapy.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DRUGSacituzumab Govitecan-Hziy 180 MG plus bevacizumabSacituzumab govitecan 10mg/kg intravenous day 1 and day 8 of a 21-day cycle, + bevacizumab 15 mg/kg iv day 1 of a 21-day cycle till unacceptable toxicity or disease progression.

Timeline

Start date
2025-04-24
Primary completion
2026-11-01
Completion
2027-04-01
First posted
2024-05-07
Last updated
2025-05-06

Locations

3 sites across 1 country: Netherlands

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT06401824. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.