RecruitingPhase 1Phase 2NCT06776757

Sintilimab in Combination with Cetuximab and Chemotherapy As First-line Treatment for RAS/BRAF Wild-type Advanced Colorectal Cancer

Sintilimab in Combination with Cetuximab and Chemotherapy As First-line Treatment for RAS/BRAF Wild-type Advanced Colorectal Cancer: an Open-label, Non-comparative, Phase 1b/2 Dose Escalation and Expansion Trial


Sponsor

Cancer Hospital Chinese Academy of Medical Science, Shenzhen Center

Enrollment

30 participants

Start Date

Dec 25, 2023

Study Type

INTERVENTIONAL

Conditions

Summary

In 2018, global cancer incidence reached 18.1 million new cases, with 9.6 million cancer-related deaths. Colorectal cancer ranked as the third most common malignancy by incidence. Data from the U.S. NIH SEER database indicate a five-year survival rate for colorectal cancer of approximately 65%. Specifically, the survival rate is 90% for localized (non-metastatic) cases, 71% for regional (lymph node metastasis) cases, and only 14% for advanced metastatic cases. According to the China Society of Clinical Oncology (CSCO) guidelines, first-line therapy for advanced colorectal cancer typically involves chemotherapy combined with targeted agents, such as bevacizumab or cetuximab, yielding a median survival of 20-30 months. Prognosis is generally better for RAS wild-type patients compared to those with RAS mutations. In subsequent lines of therapy, chemotherapy combined with targeted therapy results in remission for approximately 22% of patients, although overall survival rarely exceeds 12 months. Basic research has demonstrated that cetuximab, when combined with chemotherapy, enhances the infiltration of NK cells, cytotoxic T cells, and other immune cells into the tumor microenvironment. In head and neck cancer, an increase in PD-1+ and TIM-3+ tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes (TILs) during cetuximab treatment was negatively correlated with treatment response. Blocking these immune checkpoints may improve cetuximab-based immunotherapy by reversing CD8+ TIL dysfunction, potentially enhancing clinical outcomes. The cetuximab-chemotherapy regimen increases tumor immunogenicity by inducing tumor cell death and antigen release. When combined with immune checkpoint inhibitors, cetuximab may convert "cold tumors" into "hot tumors," thus synergistically improving tumor cell elimination. Additionally, cetuximab has been shown to activate tumor-promoting M2 macrophages, particularly CD163-positive macrophages in colorectal cancer, which produce high levels of Fc-γ receptors and PD-L1, supporting the theoretical basis for combining cetuximab with immune checkpoint inhibitors in colorectal cancer treatment. In patients with locally advanced colorectal cancer, immune checkpoint inhibitors like PD-1 and CTLA-4 inhibitors have shown preliminary efficacy. The NICHE study reported a 100% pathological response in MSI-H patients and a 27% response in MSS-type patients, indicating potential benefits and safety of immunotherapy in both MSI-H sensitive and MSS/pMMR populations. For first-line treatment of advanced colorectal cancer, the BBCAPX Phase II study showed that sintilimab combined with CapeOX and bevacizumab resulted in an objective response rate (ORR) of 84% and a 100% disease control rate in RAS-mutant, MSS-type metastatic colorectal cancer (mCRC) patients. Similarly, the AIO-KRK-0216 study found that a combination of Avelumab (PD-L1), cetuximab, and chemotherapy produced an ORR of 79.5% in first-line MSS-type metastatic colorectal cancer. In later-line therapy, the REGONIVO Phase II study reported a 36% ORR for PD-1 monoclonal antibody combined with anti-angiogenesis agents (chemotherapy, targeted therapy) in metastatic colorectal cancer, with a 33% ORR for MSS-type patients. The median progression-free survival (PFS) was 7.9 months, though median overall survival (OS) had not been reached.


Eligibility

Min Age: 18 YearsMax Age: 75 Years

Plain Language Summary

Simplified for easier understanding

This study is testing a combination of four treatments — an immunotherapy drug (sintilimab), a targeted antibody (cetuximab, which blocks a cancer growth signal), and standard chemotherapy — as a first-line treatment for people with advanced colorectal cancer that has not spread to the point of being operable and has specific genetic characteristics (RAS and BRAF wild-type). **You may be eligible if...** - You are between 18 and 75 years old - You have advanced (stage IV) colorectal cancer confirmed by biopsy - Your tumor is RAS/BRAF wild-type (a specific genetic profile — your doctor can check this) - Your tumor shows certain immune markers (PD-L1 or CD8+ tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes) - You have not had previous systemic treatment, or your adjuvant chemotherapy ended at least 6 months ago - You are in good general health (ECOG 0–1) **You may NOT be eligible if...** - Your tumor has RAS or BRAF mutations - You have already received treatment for metastatic colorectal cancer - You have inadequate organ function Talk to your doctor to see if this trial is right for you.

This summary was AI-generated to explain the trial in plain language. It is not medical advice. Always discuss eligibility with your doctor before enrolling in a clinical trial.

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Interventions

DRUGSintilimab+Cetuximab+Chemotherapy (mFOLFOX6/FOLFIRI/CAPEOX/CAPIRI)

Sintilimab (100mg,150mg, 200mg; Q3W) +Cetuximab (500mg/m²,Q2W)+Chemotherapy(mFOLFOX6/FOLFIRI/CAPEOX/CAPIRI)

DRUGSintilimab+Cetuximab+Chemotherapy (mFOLFOX6/FOLFIRI/CAPEOX/CAPIRI)

Sintilimab (Based on Phase 1b recommended dose; Q3W) +Cetuximab (500mg/m²,Q2W)+Chemotherapy(mFOLFOX6/FOLFIRI/CAPEOX/CAPIRI)


Locations(1)

National Cancer Center, National Clinical Research Center for Cancer, Cancer Hospital & Shenzhen Hospital

Shenzhen, Guangdong, China

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NCT06776757


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