Overview
The vast majority of liver cancers have an insidious onset and are often asymptomatic in the early stages, making early diagnosis difficult. Once diagnosed, most liver cancers have reached locally advanced stages or distant metastases, equivalent to Barcelona stage (BCLC) C-D. The tumors progress rapidly and there is a lack of effective treatments. The survival period of cancer patients is generally only 3-6 months. Cellular immunotherapy, including CAR-T and TCR-T, is considered a new hope for the treatment of cancer.
The purpose of this study is to explore the safety of QY-1-T (a TCR-T targeting HBV) in the treatment of HBV-related liver cancer, and to preliminarily evaluate the efficacy of QY-1-T in patients with HBV-related advanced liver cancer.
Eligibility
Inclusion Criteria:
- Subjects aged 18-75 years old (male or female)
- The subject voluntarily participate and have the ability to sign the informed consent independently
- Patient with advanced hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) confirmed by histopathology or cytology (BCLC stage B and C, or CNLC stage IIA/IIB and IIIA/IIIB). One of the following four conditions applies:a. Patients with advanced hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) who are not candidates for surgery or local therapy and have previously failed or become intolerable after at least second-line or higher standardized systemic therapy (including but not limited to targeted therapy, immunotherapy, or chemotherapy) and whose disease progression or intolerance has been determined by imaging examination during or after treatment, Or patients whom the investigator believes could benefit. b. HCC patients with clinically confirmed recurrence or progression after local treatment, and the interval between treatment and enrollment is at least 4 weeks. c. HCC recurrence after resection progresses or is not tolerated by systemic therapy or TACE/HAIC or radiofrequency ablation, and the interval between treatment and entrainment is at least 4 weeks. d. Recurrence of liver cancer after liver transplantation progresses or is not tolerated after systemic therapy or TACE/HAIC or radiofrequency ablation, and the interval between treatment and entrainment is at least 4 weeks
- Prior systemic therapy should be discontinued for at least 2 weeks prior to enrollment
- The expected survival time is more than 6 months
- The subject has at least one tumor lesion that can be measured according to RECIST1.1
- Hepatitis B virus surface antigen (HBsAg) positive or previous positive history
- The HLA typing of peripheral blood was HLA-A*11:01
- Non-cirrhosis or compensatory cirrhosis Child-Pugh < 7 score
- ECOG scoring standard ≤1
- Blood routine and blood biochemical indicators: a. white blood cells ≥3×10^9/L. b. Serum aspartate aminotransferase (AST) and alanine aminotransferase (ALT) ≤5× upper limit of normal (ULN). c. Serum total bilirubin ≤2×ULN. d.eGFR≥60ml /min. e. Hemoglobin > 90g/L. f. Platelet count ≥50×10^9/L. g. Creatinine ≤1.5×ULN. h. International standardized ratio INR≤1.5 or activated partial thrombin time (APTT) extended within 10s.
- Female subjects of childbearing age, whose serum pregnancy tests must be negative, and all subjects must agree to take effective contraceptive measures during the test
- Subject agrees to abstain from alcohol during the study
- The subject is willing and able to follow all treatment procedures and protocols
Exclusion Criteria:
- The presence of a secondary primary malignancy, except in the following cases: a. Non-melanoma treated by excision, such as basal cell skin cancer. b. curable carcinoma in situ, such as cervical, bladder or breast cancer
- Liver tumor load exceeds 70%
- Co-transplanters
- Main portal vein cancer thrombus
- Moderate to severe ascites
- Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) 1 or 2 positive or acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) history, treponema pallidum antibody positive
- Decompensated cirrhosis Child-Pugh B or C (7-15 points)
- Clinically significant bleeding symptoms or definite bleeding tendency, such as gastrointestinal bleeding, hemorrhagic gastric ulcer, hereditary or acquired bleeding and thrombosis tendency (such as hemophilia, coagulation disorder, thrombocytopenia, hypersplenism, etc.) within 2 weeks prior to the study, and more serious arteriovenous thrombosis events occurring within the previous 6 months,Such as cerebrovascular diseases (including cerebral hemorrhage, cerebral infarction), pulmonary embolism, etc.
- Have high blood pressure that cannot be effectively controlled, i.e. systolic blood pressure > 160 mmHg or diastolic blood pressure > 110 mmHg after antihypertensive treatment
- Serum HBV DNA≥1000 IU/ml during screening (HBV positive for transplant donors of primary liver cancer patients), antiviral treatment can be performed according to the actual situation before admission
- HCV RNA positive
- Prior cell therapy, such as but not limited to NK, CIK, DC, CTL, stem cell therapy
- Concurrent treatment with other anti-tumor therapies, including cytotoxic chemotherapy, hormone therapy and immunotherapy
- Use of immune checkpoint inhibitors within 1 month
- Patient with Grade III or IV cardiac dysfunction, arrhythmias that cannot be controlled by drugs or QTc interval > 450ms for men and > 470ms for women according to the NYHA grading criteria
- Any other medical conditions that may increase subjects' risk or interfere with study results
- Has any condition that interferes with drug administration and study sample collection
- Those who have a history of psychotropic drug abuse and cannot abstain or have a history of mental disorders
- Participate in other drug clinical studies within 4 weeks before screening
- Pregnant or lactating women
- Failure to follow or cooperate with relevant treatment procedures and protocols during the study period