Investigator
Radboud University Medical Center
NEOadjuvant Dendritic cell therapy added to first line standard of care in advanced epithelial Ovarian Cancer (NEODOC): protocol of a first-in-human, exploratory, single-centre phase I/II trial in the Netherlands
Introduction The currently available immunotherapies have failed to meet expectations in inducing durable responses in patients with advanced epithelial ovarian cancer (EOC). The low number of somatic missense mutations in EOC necessitates highly potent neoantigen-directed approaches. To this end, we have developed a novel dendritic cell (DC) product that consists of a specialised cross-presenting subset of DC, conventional DC type 1 (cDC1). Methods and analysis We will conduct the NEODOC study, an investigator-initiated first-in-human phase I/II trial. This study will assess the immunogenicity, safety and feasibility of a cDC1-based, autologous tumour lysate-loaded, DC product. 10 patients with previously untreated advanced EOC (stage IIIb-c, IVa or stage IVb if only supradiaphragmatic or inguinal lymph nodes <1 cm) requiring neoadjuvant chemotherapy will receive DC therapy alongside standard-of-care carboplatin/paclitaxel chemotherapy and interval cytoreductive surgery. The primary endpoint is immune response, and the secondary endpoints are the safety and feasibility of the treatment as well as clinical efficacy. Ethics and dissemination Ethical approval for this trial was granted by the Netherlands Central Committee on Research Involving Human Subjects. The results will be disseminated through publications in international, open-access scientific journals and presentations at scientific conferences. Trial registration number NCT05773859 ; EUCT number 2024-512353-24-01.
NEOadjuvant Dendritic Cell Vaccination for Ovarian Cancer
This goal of this single arm, single center, exploratory phase I/II clinical trial is to learn more about the immunological efficacy, safety and feasibility of an autologous tumor lysate-loaded autologous XP-DC (cDC1)-based vaccine in patients with ovarian cancer.
Researcher