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Chemoimmunotherapy Combined With Autologous NK Cell Therapy for Pediatric Patients With Refractory and Relapsed High-Risk Neuroblastoma and Ganglioneuroblastoma

Chemoimmunotherapy Combined With Autologous NK Cell Therapy for Pediatric Patients With Refractory and Relapsed High-Risk Neuroblastoma and Ganglioneuroblastoma

Recruiting
18-18 years
All
Phase 3

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Overview

Neuroblastoma (NB) is a malignant neoplasm of the sympathetic nervous system, occurring in 1 in 8,000 live births, accounting for 6-10% of all childhood malignant neoplasms and responsible for 12-15% of mortality -, making it the most common and life-threatening extracranial tumor in childhood.

Patients with stage 4 high-risk NB is the subgroup with the poorest prognosis. Within this group, two subgroups with an extremely unfavorable disease course are distinguished: patients with a poor response to the induction phase of therapy (refractory disease) and patients with relapsed or progressive disease.

Nowadays, 10-15% of patients show a poor end-induction response, whereas achieving a good end-induction response associated with better long-term survival. Improvement of the response to induction therapy may contribute to better treatment outcomes in newly diagnosed high-risk NB patients and can be achieved by intensification of the induction phase to decrease the number of patients with refractory disease. Also intensification of the second-line therapy may contribute to better responses in patients with relapsed and progressive disease.

Protocol aimed to overcome heterogeneous tumor drug resistance through the synergistic interaction of cytostatic and immunobiological agents in combination with NK cell therapy.

This approach combines cytotoxic agents with anti-GD2 monoclonal antibodies (mAb) to enhance antitumor activity. Cultured, ex vivo-activated autologous NK cells are infused to compensate for effector cell depletion during therapy and to augment antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity (ADCC), potentially improving clinical outcomes.

This comprehensive approach opens novel prospects for enhancing treatment efficacy in patients with refractory and relapsed high-risk NB.

The expected outcomes of this protocol include a significant increase in therapeutic efficacy indicators - objective response rate (ORR), overall survival (OS), progression-free survival (PFS) and relapse-free survival (RFS), as well as in patient quality of life.

Description

The study design evaluates a therapeutic interventionin two independent groups:

  1. Arm А: patients with a refractory disease
  2. Arm B: patients with relapsed/ progression disease

Intervention plan for patients with a refractory NB (arm A):

Patients who meet the inclusion criteria will undergo an intensified induction phase within the framework of this clinical trial protocol, while the preceding induction phase and subsequent consolidation and post-consolidation phases will be performed outside of this protocol in accordance with the current clinical practice. As part of the intensified induction, a procedure for the collection of mononuclear cells for the cultivation and expansion of the autologous NK cell product (Day -1) is planned, followed by one course of chemotherapy according to the IT regimen (irinotecan + temozolomide) and four courses of chemoimmunotherapy in combination with autologous NK cell therapy according to the DIT regimen (irinotecan + temozolomide + dinutuximab beta + NK-cell product), with an inter-cycle interval of 21 days. Transfusion of the autologous NK cell product will be performed on Day 7 of each DIT course.

Intervention plan for patients with relapsed/progression (arm В):

Patients who meet the inclusion criteria will undergo peripheral blood collection with subsequent isolation of mononuclear cells for cultivation and expansion of an autologous NK cell product (Day -1), followed by administration of the first course of chemotherapy according to the IT regimen (irinotecan + temozolomide) and five courses of chemoimmunotherapy in combination with autologous NK cell therapy according to the DIT regimen (irinotecan + temozolomide + dinutuximab beta + autologous NK cell product) with a 21-day inter-cycle interval within the framework of this clinical trial protocol. Subsequent phases of therapy (including delayed surgery and external beam radiotherapy) will be carried out after completion of the chemoimmunotherapy in combination with autologous NK cell therapy, outside the present protocol, in accordance with current clinical practice. Transfusion of the autologous NK cell product will be performed on Day 7 of each DIT course.

Eligibility

Inclusion Criteria:

  • Signed voluntary informed consent to participate in the clinical trial
  • Histologically verified diagnosis of neuroblastoma or ganglioneuroblastoma
  • Patients stratified to the high-risk group according to the criteria of the German Society of Pediatric Oncology and Hematology (GPOH) - NB 2004, aged from 18 months to 18 years, and meeting the following conditions:
    1. Arm A: Refractory disease - patients who have completed the induction phase of therapy (6 cycles of N5/N6) with a poor response to therapy (MR, SD), with the exception of PD
    2. Arm В: Relapsed/progressive disease - patients who develop any new tumor lesions (after having previously achieved СR), or any new tumor lesion; an increase of \>25% in any previously existing measurable lesion; or newly detected bone marrow involvement by NB cells in cases where the bone marrow had previously been free of involvement
  • Performance status ≥ 70% (Lansky or Karnofsky scale) at the time of determining the indication for chemoimmunotherapy combined with NK cell therapy.
  • Expected life expectancy ≥ 12 weeks.
  • No signs of drug-induced neuropathy or neuropathic pain.
  • Adequate liver function: alanine aminotransferase (ALT) / aspartate aminotransferase (AST) activity \< 5 × upper limit of normal (ULN).
  • Adequate renal function: creatinine clearance or glomerular filtration rate (GFR) \> 60 mL/min/1.73 m².
  • Coagulation parameters: prothrombin index (PTI) 70-120%; activated partial thromboplastin time (APTT) \< 36 seconds.
  • No clinical signs of heart failure; left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF) ≥ 55%.
  • Adequate respiratory function (oxygen saturation by pulse oximetry \> 94% on room air, no dyspnea at rest), and no pathological findings on chest X-ray.
  • Completion of comprehensive assessment to evaluate the extent of the tumor process.

Exclusion Criteria:

  • Lack of a signed voluntary informed consent form for participation in the clinical study.
  • Absence of comprehensive pre-treatment assessment results at the time of initiation of specific therapy.
  • Patients with NBL or ganglioneuroblastoma stratified to low or intermediate-risk group
  • Good response (PR, VGPR, CR) or PD at the end of the induction phase of therapy (applicable only to patients receiving therapy within the framework of the intensified induction phase).
  • Progressive or relapsed disease with central nervous system involvement and/or leptomeningeal involvement.
  • History of acute intolerance reactions to the main chemotherapeutic and immunobiological agents and supportive care drugs used in this clinical trial protocol.
  • Presence of complications of the underlying disease and comorbidities that preclude treatment within this protocol, including severe type I hypersensitivity reactions in the medical history.
  • Requirement for concomitant medications with known cross pharmacodynamic interactions with the drugs used in this clinical trial protocol.
  • Presence of ultrasonographic signs of heart failure (LVEF ≤ 55%), clinical and laboratory signs of chronic kidney disease of stage ≥ III, or kidney injury of grade I, F or L according to the standardized RIFLE criteria for acute kidney injury (an acronym for "risk, injury, failure, loss, end-stage").
  • Pregnancy, due to the high teratogenicity and toxicity of the drugs used in this clinical trial protocol. Female patients of childbearing potential are required to undergo pregnancy testing.
  • Mental illness of the patient or legal guardians that makes it impossible to understand the nature of the study and compromises adherence to medical prescriptions and sanitary-hygienic requirements.

Study details
    Neuroblastoma (NB)
    Ganglioneuroblastoma

NCT07375563

Federal Research Institute of Pediatric Hematology, Oncology and Immunology

31 January 2026

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