Investigator

Ji Eun Oh

Assistant Professor · Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology, GSMSE

JEOJi Eun Oh
Papers(1)
Randomized Phase II T…
Collaborators(10)
Levent MutluMasoud AzodiMichelle GreenmanMitchell ClarkNatalia BuzaPei HuiPeter E. SchwartzSangini S. ShethSean FlahertyShefali Pathy
Institutions(3)
Korea Advanced Instit…Yale UniversitySouthern Illinois Uni…

Papers

Randomized Phase II Trial of Imiquimod with or without 9-Valent HPV Vaccine versus Observation in Patients with High-grade Pre-neoplastic Cervical Lesions (NCT02864147)

Abstract Purpose: We report the results of a randomized phase II trial of imiquimod, a topical immune-response modulator versus imiquimod plus a 9-valent human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccine (9vHPV) versus clinical surveillance in cervical intraepithelial neoplasia (CIN2/3) patients. Patients and Methods: We randomly allocated 133 patients with untreated CIN2/3 in equal proportions to a 4-month treatment with self-applied vaginal suppositories containing imiquimod (Arm B) or imiquimod plus a 9vHPV (Arm C) versus clinical surveillance (Arm A). The main outcome was efficacy, defined as histologic regression to CIN1 or less. Secondary outcomes were HPV clearance and tolerability. Exploratory objectives included the comparison of cervical CD4/CD8 T-cell infiltration at baseline, mid-study, and posttreatment by flow cytometry among study arms. Results: Of the 114 evaluable patients 77% and 23% harbored CIN2 and CIN3, respectively. Regression to CIN1 or less was observed in 95% of patients in the imiquimod group (Arm B) compared with 79% in the control/surveillance (Arm A); P = 0.043 and 84% in the imiquimod+9vHPV group (Arm C; P = 0.384 vs. Arm A). Neither of the treatment-arm differences from Arm A reached the prespecified α = 0.025 significance level. No significant differences were noted in the secondary outcome of rate of HPV clearance. The number of tissue-resident memory CD4/CD8 T cells in cytobrush samples demonstrated a >5-fold increase in Arm B/imiquimod when compared with Arm A/surveillance (P < 0.01). In contrast, there was no significant difference in T-cell responses among participants in Arm C when compared with Arm A. Imiquimod treatment was well tolerated. Conclusions: Although imiquimod induced a higher regression to CIN1 or less and significant increases in CD4/CD8 T cells infiltrating the cervix, it did not meet its prespecified statistical outcome for efficacy. A higher regression rate than expected was observed in the surveillance arm of this prospective trial. Future clinical trials with imiquimod targeting CIN3 patients are warranted.

20Works
1Papers
21Collaborators
Respiratory Tract InfectionsPrecancerous ConditionsNeoplasm GradingDisease Models, AnimalDisease Progression

Positions

2020–

Assistant Professor

Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology · GSMSE

2016–

Postdoc

Yale University · Immunobiology

2014–

Postdoc

Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology · GSMSE

Education

2014

Ph. D.

Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology

2009

M.S.

Ewha Womans University · College of Medicine

2005

M.D.

Ewha Womans University · College of Medicine