Study of Bavituximab, Axitinib, and Avelumab in Advanced Hepatocellular Carcinoma

Categoría Estudio primario
Registro de estudiosClinicalTrials.gov
Año 23
Preclinical evidence indicates that VEGF and VEGF-dependent angiogenesis may induce immune suppression in tumors by impairing antigen presenting cells and effector T-cells, and enhancing T-regulatory cells and monocytes. Thus, targeting VEGF may reprogram the tumor immune microenvironment to render cancers more vulnerable to immunotherapies. Indeed, the use of anti-VEGF strategies as an immunotherapy adjuvant has been associated with clinical benefit in multiple cancer types including HCC, and no new safety signals. While the clinical benefit of monotherapy axitinib in HCC is modest, use of axitinib as an immunotherapy adjuvant may circumvent primary resistance mechanisms to immune checkpoint inhibitors in HCC leading to more frequent or robust anti-tumor immunity. Given the complimentary immune augmenting mechanisms of targeting VEGF and phosphatidylserine, combination axitinib, bavituximab, and avelumab, a PD-L1 antibody, represents a novel and rational immunotherapy regimen in HCC.
Epistemonikos ID: b7cf524f709e9ff705aa4d622aa6de300e8d5104
First added on: Oct 02, 2023