Journal of Hematology & Oncology (Oct 2022)

Randomized phase 2 trial of intravenous oncolytic virus JX-594 combined with low-dose cyclophosphamide in patients with advanced soft-tissue sarcoma

  • Maud Toulmonde,
  • Sophie Cousin,
  • Michèle Kind,
  • Jean-Philippe Guegan,
  • Alban Bessede,
  • Francois Le Loarer,
  • Raul Perret,
  • Coralie Cantarel,
  • Carine Bellera,
  • Antoine Italiano

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s13045-022-01370-9
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 1
pp. 1 – 5

Abstract

Read online

Abstract JX-594 is an oncolytic vaccinia virus genetically modified to replicate selectively in tumor cells. Metronomic chemotherapy has shown preclinical synergy with oncolytic viruses. We report here the results of the METROMAJX which is a randomized phase II clinical trial investigating the combination of JX-594 combined with metronomic cyclophosphamide (arm 1) or metronomic cyclophosphamide (arm 2) in patients with advanced STS. A two-stage Simon design was used. JX-594 was administered intra-venously at the dose 1.109 every 2 weeks for the first 3 injections and then every 3 weeks. Cyclophosphamide was given orally at the dose of 50 mg BID 1 week on 1 week off. The primary endpoint was the 6-month non progression rate. 20 patients were included (arm 1:15, arm 2:5). The two most frequent toxicities were grade 1 fatigue and fever and grade 2 fatigue and grade 2 lymphopenia in arms 1 and 2, respectively. In arm 1, 12 patients were assessable for the efficacy analysis. None of them were progression-free at 6 months indicating that the first stage of the Simon's design was not satisfied. One patient out 4 assessable for efficacy was progression-free at 6 months in arm 2. High throughput analysis of sequential plasma samples revealed an upregulation of protein biomarkers reflecting immune induction such as CXCL10 and soluble CD8 antigen in arm 1. Systemic treatment with JX-594 is safe in patients with advanced STS. Further investigations are needed to improve immune response to oncolytic viruses and define their therapeutic potential in patients with STS.

Keywords