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Brief Title: Phase I Clinical Trial of Cryoimmunotherapy Against Prostate Cancer
Official Title: A Phase I Clinical Trial of Combined Cryotherapy and Intra-tumoral Immunotherapy With Autologous Immature Dendritic Cells in Men With Castration Resistant Prostatic Cancer and Metastases to Lymph Nodes and/or Bone Pre or Post Chemotherapy
Study ID: NCT02423928
Brief Summary: 20 patients with invasive castration resistant prostate cancer and radiologically verified metastases will be enrolled into the Phase I Clinical Trial. The trial is a dendritic cell based immunotherapy. Autologous dendritic cells will be obtained by leukapheresis and elutriation and stimulation by cytokines. The induced dendritic cells will have to pass viability, immunophenotyping and sterility criteria and will be injected into a cryoablated region of the primary prostate cancer tumor. The treatment is supplemented by immunomodulatory regimens.
Detailed Description: The study treatment dendritic cells (ACT2001) will be injected into the prostate following prostatic cryoablation. It is speculated that antigen from the cryoablated cancer will be available in the vicinity of the cryoablation field immediately following the procedure. Autologous, immature dendritic cells are capable of internalizing antigen, migrating to the lymphatic system, and presenting antigenic epitopes to T lymphocytes. In this way, dendritic cells are capable of initiating a cell-mediated systemic immune response. In concept, the cancer itself should provide a specific and potentially broad spectrum of cancer-related antigens. Regulatory T lymphocytes, which have been implicated in dampening or halting cell-mediated, antigen-specific immune responses, will be selectively depleted using a regimen of low-dose cyclophosphamide. Low-dose cyclophosphamide has been empirically shown to selectively deplete the number of circulating regulatory T cells. The second half of patients will in addition receive treatment with the the immune checkpoint inhibitor ipilimumab antibody as one additional measure to avoid cancer cell immune evasion. Using this combination of therapies, it is thought that a clinically significant anti-cancer immune response might be elicited.
Minimum Age: 18 Years
Eligible Ages: ADULT, OLDER_ADULT
Sex: MALE
Healthy Volunteers: No
Haukeland University Hospital Research Department, Bergen, Hordaland, Norway
Name: Christian Beisland, MD PhD
Affiliation: Bergen Health
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR