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Not Yet RecruitingNCT07321847

Injection of IP-001 Into Thermally Ablated Hepatic Tumors in Patients With Colorectal Liver Metastases

Intratumoral Injection of IP-001 Following Standard-of-care Complete Hepatic Tumor Ablation in Patients With Liver-only Metastatic Colorectal Cancer

Status
Not Yet Recruiting
Phase
Phase 2 / Phase 3
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
717 (estimated)
Sponsor
Immunophotonics, Inc. · Industry
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

The goal of this clinical trial is to learn if a new injectable drug (IP-001), administered after standard liver tumor ablation, can help prevent cancer from returning in people (males/females, ≥18 years old) with colorectal cancer that has spread only to the liver. The study will determine if injecting IP-001 into a liver tumor(s) after ablation will reduce the risk of cancer coming back in the liver and from spreading elsewhere in the body, will stimulate the immune system, will have any side effects, and will help improve a patient's response to other cancer therapies. Researchers will compare a standard of care liver ablation alone (microwave ablation \[MWA\], a technique that destroys tumors using heat), with MWA plus a high-dose IP-001 or MWA with a low-dose IP-001. During the treatment procedures, the doctor first performs the standard microwave ablation to destroy the tumor. Then, in the experimental-drug arms, IP-001 is injected in and around the treated tumor area to activate the immune system locally so that the body is more likely to find and eliminate any remaining cancer cells.

Detailed description

This is a Phase 2/3, three-arm, dose finding, randomized, controlled, patient-blinded, international, adaptive design study in patients with liver-only metastatic colorectal cancer. The purpose is to investigate the efficacy and safety of the two different dose concentrations of IP-001 for Injection administered intratumorally following standard of care (SOC) complete thermal ablation of liver tumors with microwave ablation (MWA) compared SOC MWA alone. MWA alone is selected as the control because, in patients with liver-only metastatic colorectal cancer treated with curative intent, MWA is an accepted SOC therapeutic strategy and routine continuation of systemic therapy in this context is not mandated by guidelines and remains heterogeneous across institutions. The study is designed with a seamless transition from Phase 2 to the Phase 3 based on prespecified dose selection and interim efficacy and safety criteria. Phase 2 will include three-arms: MWA alone, MWA plus 10 mg/ml IP-001, or MWA plus 1 mg/ml IP-001. Crossover from the Control Arm to an Experimental Arm is not allowed. Phase 3 will continue to be randomized between the MWA alone (control) and the MWA plus IP-001 dose selected based on the Phase 2 interim (futility) analysis. The trial will consist of the following three periods described below. 1. Screening Period: Up to 28 days for screening assessments to determine study eligibility. 2. Treatment and Follow-up Period: On Treatment Day 1, in a single session, all patients will undergo SOC hepatic tumor MWA with predetermined margins. Immediately following ablation, patients in the Experimental Arms will receive the appropriate dose of IP-001 intratumorally into all ablated tumor(s). Blood samples will be taken before treatment starts, and then again on various days after treatment to help check for important blood markers in and how the drug works in the body. In addition, patients will undergo post-treatment efficacy and safety and tolerability efficacy assessments for 12 weeks before patients move on to standard surveillance monitoring. 3. Surveillance Period: Patients will be followed for efficacy, concomitant medication and procedures, and survival, every 3 months for the first year, and then every 6 months thereafter for 5 years after the initial treatment. Patients who develop a new or recurrent tumor(s) may be eligible receive additional treatment, as appropriate, including study retreatment, other standard liver treatments, or systemic anti-cancer therapy. Patients will be followed for subsequent anticancer therapies/procedures, progression, and survival status, as indicated, for 5 years after the original treatment day to help researchers determine if IP-001 will improve a patient's response to other cancer therapies.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DRUG1.0% IP-001 for Injection, a 10 mg/mL solution of IP-001 in waterIP-001 is a novel, non-cytotoxic, immunostimulatory glycan polymer administered as a single intratumoral injection into the ablation zone immediately following standard of care image-guided microwave thermal ablation of a target tumor lesion.
DRUG1.0% IP-001 for Injection, a 1 mg/mL solution of IP-001 in water.IP-001 is a novel, non-cytotoxic, immunostimulatory glycan polymer administered as a single intratumoral injection into the ablation zone immediately following standard of care image-guided microwave thermal ablation of a target tumor lesion.
PROCEDUREMicrowave (thermal) tumor ablationMicrowave ablation is a common medical procedure where doctors use imaging (like ultrasound or CT) to guide a thin probe into a tumor. The probe gives off microwave energy that heats up the tumor from the inside, causing the cancer cells in that spot to die. Unlike treatments such as chemotherapy or immunotherapy, which travel through the whole body, microwave ablation works only on the specific area being treated. It does not involve any drugs or medicines circulating in the bloodstream. It is a local treatment that targets just the tumor.

Timeline

Start date
2026-05-01
Primary completion
2033-12-01
Completion
2033-12-01
First posted
2026-01-07
Last updated
2026-01-07

Regulatory

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT07321847. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.