A Trial of FANG™ Vaccine for Participants With Ovarian Cancer

June 5, 2025 updated by: Gradalis, Inc.

Open-label Phase II Trial of Adjuvant bishRNAfurin and GMCSF Augmented Autologous Tumor Cell Vaccine (FANG™) for High Risk Stage III/IV Ovarian Cancer

This was a clinical trial for women with ovarian cancer scheduled to have an operation to remove the cancerous tissue. The cancer cells removed during the planned surgery were used to attempt to make the investigational product, named Vigil. Vigil is considered an immunotherapy. In this study, participants who met the requirements to be in the study and if Vigil was successfully made from the participants cancer cells, participants underwent treatment with their standard chemotherapy regimen. At the end of the standard chemotherapy regimen and if there was no evidence of remaining cancer, participants were randomly assigned to receive the Vigil or would be assigned to the standard of care group, which in this study meant no further treatment was given to the participant.

The purpose of this study was to compare the difference between the participants who received Vigil versus the usual care after completion of standard chemotherapy and to determine if Vigil delayed or prevented ovarian cancer from coming back.

Study Overview

Status

Completed

Conditions

Intervention / Treatment

Detailed Description

This was a Phase II open-label study of Vigil™ autologous tumor cell vaccine trial administered to women with Stage III/IV epithelial ovarian cancer. Tumor was harvested at the time of surgical debulking (standard of medical care). Participants who achieved clinical complete response (CR) following primary surgical debulking and front-line doublet chemotherapy were randomized 2:1 to either treatment with Vigil (Group A) or standard of care without maintenance therapy (Group B). After randomization, participants were stratified into cohorts by baseline CA-125 (greater than 10 to less than 20 units/mL versus less than or equal to 10 units/mL). For data analysis, participants could further be stratified by surgical stage (Stage IV or suboptimal debulking (> 1cm residual), Stage III disease versus Stage III disease with optimal debulking (< 1cm residual). Participants enrolled in Group A (Vigil) received 1.0 x 10e7 cells / intradermal injection of gene transfected autologous tumor cells, Vigil™, once a month for up to 12 doses as long as sufficient material was available or until trial endpoints were met. Enough harvested tissue to provide a minimum of 4 monthly injections was required for entry into the study. Participants enrolled in Group B (Standard of Care, SOC) were observed and assessed until trial endpoints were met. Protocol Amendment 8, June 19, 2014 removed randomization such that all patients screening for enrollment into the main portion of the trial (including those who previously had tumor tissue harvested) would be assigned to Group A (Vigil).

Both groups of participants were seen once a month in an outpatient setting. Hematologic function, liver enzymes, renal function and electrolytes were monitored monthly. Immune function analysis including ELISPOT analysis of cytotoxic T cell function to autologous tumor antigens were monitored at (≤ 24 hours before the third cycle chemotherapy (post debulking), baseline (screening); prior to Vigil injection at Months 2, 3, 6 and EOT. CA-125 was monitored at baseline, every month for the first year, every 3 months +/- 2 weeks for the second and third year.

Participants assigned to group A were allowed to continue treatment with Vigil until disease recurrence or exhaustion of the patient's vaccine supply. If ≥ Grade 2 toxicity by NCI Common Toxicity Criteria (excluding Grade 2 fever ≤ 24 hours and Grade 2 and 3 injection site reactions) developed related to study treatment, the vaccine dose was reduced by 50% and continued on a monthly basis.

Efficacy assessments included time to disease recurrence, immune surrogate markers, and quality of life questionnaire (FACT-O, Version 4). Safety assessments included physical examination, performance status, and vital signs. Adverse events were recorded using CTCAE version 3.

Study Type

Interventional

Enrollment (Actual)

39

Phase

  • Phase 2

Contacts and Locations

This section provides the contact details for those conducting the study, and information on where this study is being conducted.

Study Locations

    • Florida
      • West Palm Beach, Florida, United States, 33401
        • Florida Cancer Specialists
    • New Hampshire
      • Lebanon, New Hampshire, United States, 03756
        • Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center/Norris Cotton Cancer Center
    • New Jersey
      • Hackensack, New Jersey, United States, 07601
        • Hackensack University Medical Center
    • Texas
      • Dallas, Texas, United States, 75230
        • Mary Crowley Cancer Research Centers
      • Dallas, Texas, United States, 75246
        • Texas Oncology - Sammons Cancer Center
      • Fort Worth, Texas, United States, 76104
        • Texas Oncology - Fort Worth
    • Washington
      • Spokane, Washington, United States, 99202
        • Cancer Care Northwest

Participation Criteria

Researchers look for people who fit a certain description, called eligibility criteria. Some examples of these criteria are a person's general health condition or prior treatments.

Eligibility Criteria

Ages Eligible for Study

18 years and older (Adult, Older Adult)

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

No

Description

Tissue Inclusion Criteria

Patients were eligible for tissue procurement for the Vigil™ vaccine manufacturing process if they met all of the following criteria:

  1. Presumptive Stage III/IV papillary serous or endometrioid ovarian cancer.
  2. Per Amendment #8, treatment naïve, high risk ovarian cancer was no longer be stratified, but the following information was collected:

    1. Stage IV or suboptimal (>1 cm residual) Stage III disease versus Stage III patients with optimal (≤1 cm residual) disease,
    2. CA-125 ≤10 U/ml versus CA-125 greater than 10 but less than or equal to 20 U/ml
    3. IP chemotherapy versus IV chemotherapy
  3. Availability of "golf-ball" size 10-30 grams tissue at time of primary surgical debulking.
  4. ECOG performance status (PS) 0-2 prior to tumor debulking laparotomy
  5. Ability to understand and the willingness to sign a written informed consent document for tissue harvest.

Tissue Exclusion Criteria

Patients who met any of the following criteria were not eligible for tissue procurement for the Vigil manufacturing:

  1. Medical condition requiring any form of chronic systemic immunosuppressive therapy (steroid or other) except physiologic replacement doses of hydrocortisone or equivalent (no more than 30 mg hydrocortisone or 10 mg prednisone equivalent daily) for < 30 days duration.
  2. Known history of other malignancy unless having undergone curative intent therapy without evidence of that disease for ≥ 3 years except cutaneous squamous cell and basal cell skin cancer, superficial bladder cancer, in situ cervical cancer or other in situ cancers were allowed if definitively resected.
  3. Brain metastases unless treated with curative intent (gamma knife or surgical resection) and without evidence of progression for ≥ 2 months.
  4. Any documented history of autoimmune disease with exception of Type 1 diabetes on stable insulin regimen, hypothyroidism on stable dose of replacement thyroid medication, vitiligo, or asthma not requiring systemic steroids.
  5. Known HIV or chronic Hepatitis B or C infection.
  6. Known history of allergies or sensitivities to gentamicin.
  7. History of or current evidence of any condition (including medical, psychiatric or substance abuse disorder), therapy, or laboratory abnormality that might confound the results of the study, interfere with the patient's participation for the full duration of the study, or was not in the best interest of the patient to participate, in the opinion of the treating Investigator.

Study Enrollment Inclusion Criteria

Patients were registered for inclusion in this study if they met all of the following criteria:

  1. Histologically confirmed Stage III/IV papillary serous or endometrioid ovarian cancer.
  2. Clinically defined CR (no cancer related symptoms, normal physical examination and CT scan abdomen/pelvis and CXR, and CA-125 ≤20 U/ml) following completion of primary surgical debulking. Patients enrolled must have completed at least 5 but no more than 6 cycles platinum/taxane adjuvant or interval debulking and chemotherapy (or chemotherapy as per recommendations of NCCN guidelines, category 1 (IP chemotherapy included)). (Patients who completed surgery/chemotherapy with a CA-125 >20 U/mL pre-registration had the option of being followed up to 2 months if serial CA-125 values continued to decrease at a rate of CA-125 decrease of ≥ 50% per month.)
  3. Successful manufacturing of 4 vials of Vigil™ vaccine
  4. Recovered from all clinically relevant toxicities related to prior protocol specific therapies (including neuropathy to ≤Grade 2).
  5. ECOG performance status (PS) 0-1.
  6. Normal organ and marrow function as defined below:

    Absolute granulocyte count ≥ 1,500/mm3 Absolute lymphocyte count ≥ 200/mm3 Platelets ≥ 75,000/mm3 Total bilirubin ≤ 2 mg/dL AST(SGOT)/ALT(SGPT) ≤ 2x institutional upper limit of normal Creatinine < 1.5 mg/dL

  7. Patients must have been off all "statin" drugs for ≥ 2 weeks prior to initiation of therapy.
  8. Ability to understand and the willingness to sign a written informed protocol specific consent document.

Study Enrollment Exclusion Criteria

Patients were excluded from this study if they met any of the following criteria:

  1. Surgery involving general anesthesia, radiotherapy, or immunotherapy within 4 weeks prior to randomization. Chemotherapy within 3 weeks prior to Vigil™ vaccine administration. Steroid therapy within 1 week prior to vaccine administration
  2. Patients must not have received any other investigational agents within 4 weeks prior to Vigil™ vaccine administration.
  3. Patients with history of brain metastases.
  4. Patients with compromised pulmonary disease.
  5. Short term (<30 days) concurrent systemic steroids ≤ 0.25 mg/kg prednisone per day (maximum 7.5 mg/day) and bronchodilators (inhaled steroids) were permitted; patients requiring other steroid regimens and/or immunosuppressives at randomization were excluded.
  6. Prior splenectomy.
  7. Prior malignancy (excluding nonmelanoma carcinomas of the skin and carcinoma in situ cervix) unless in remission for ≥ 2 years.
  8. Kaposi's Sarcoma.
  9. Uncontrolled intercurrent illness including, but not limited to ongoing or active infection, symptomatic congestive heart failure, unstable angina pectoris, cardiac arrhythmia, or psychiatric illness/social situations that would have limited compliance with study requirements.
  10. Patients with known HIV.
  11. Patients with chronic Hepatitis B and C infection.
  12. Patients with uncontrolled autoimmune diseases.

Study Plan

This section provides details of the study plan, including how the study is designed and what the study is measuring.

How is the study designed?

Design Details

  • Primary Purpose: Treatment
  • Allocation: Randomized
  • Interventional Model: Parallel Assignment
  • Masking: None (Open Label)

Arms and Interventions

Participant Group / Arm
Intervention / Treatment
Experimental: Group A (Vigil™)
Vigil immunotherapy was administered at a concentration of at 1 x 10e7 cells/injection via intradermal injection for a minimum of 4 doses and a maximum of 12 doses starting ≥3 weeks following completion of chemotherapy (no longer than 2.5 months post chemotherapy). Participants were treated monthly for up to 12 months as long as sufficient Vigil was available and the participant was clinically stable.
Vigil is composed of autologous tumor cells harvested from the patient at the time of initial de-bulking surgery which are then transfected extracorporeally, with a plasmid encoding for the gene for GM-CSF, an immune-stimulatory cytokine, and a bifunctional, short hairpin RNA which specifically knocks down the expression of furin, the critical convertase responsible for production of the two TGβ isoforms.
Other Names:
  • Bi-shRNAfurin and GMCSF Augmented Autologous Tumor Cell Immunotherapy
  • formerly known as FANG™ vaccine
No Intervention: Group B (Observational - Standard of Care)
Participants received standard of care without maintenance therapy.

What is the study measuring?

Primary Outcome Measures

Outcome Measure
Measure Description
Time Frame
Time to Recurrence (TTR)
Time Frame: Treatment start to the date of first recurrence or date of death if the participant died before recurrence. Radiographic assessment at baseline, </= 1 week prior to Cycle 4, at Standard of Care intervals, and when CA-125>35 U/mL, approximately 3 years.
Time to recurrence is the time to progression by Radiological Tumor Assessment by local investigators using the Response Evaluation Criteria in Solid Tumors (RECIST), Version 1.1. Disease recurrence was defined as the appearance of any measurable or evaluable lesion or as asymptomatic CA-125 levels >35 U/mL at two consecutive measurements, at least one month apart.
Treatment start to the date of first recurrence or date of death if the participant died before recurrence. Radiographic assessment at baseline, </= 1 week prior to Cycle 4, at Standard of Care intervals, and when CA-125>35 U/mL, approximately 3 years.

Secondary Outcome Measures

Outcome Measure
Measure Description
Time Frame
Number of Participants Positive for T-cell and Immune Activation Markers
Time Frame: Blood was collected at tissue procurement, prior to the 1st and 3rd cycles of chemotherapy post debulking, at screening, months 2, 4, 6, end of treatment, and quarterly until recurrence, up to 3 years.
Gamma interferon (γ-IFN) secretion measured by ELISpot assay was used as a marker for T-cell and immune activation to cancer specific neoantigens. Any participant that had greater than or equal to 10 spots were considered positive.
Blood was collected at tissue procurement, prior to the 1st and 3rd cycles of chemotherapy post debulking, at screening, months 2, 4, 6, end of treatment, and quarterly until recurrence, up to 3 years.
Predictive Potential of Tumor Infiltrating Lymphocyte (TIL) and Tumor Associated Macrophage (TAM) Phenotypes
Time Frame: From tissue procurement until recurrence.
Predictive potential for TIL and TAM was expected to be measured from tissue collected at baseline and at recurrence.
From tissue procurement until recurrence.
Vigil Related Adverse Events (AEs)
Time Frame: From first dose of Vigil until 30 days following last dose of Vigil, up to 13 months.
AEs were reported using Common Terminology Criteria for Adverse Events (CTCAE) version 3.0.
From first dose of Vigil until 30 days following last dose of Vigil, up to 13 months.

Collaborators and Investigators

This is where you will find people and organizations involved with this study.

Sponsor

Investigators

  • Study Director: John Nemunaitis, MD, Gradalis, Inc.

Publications and helpful links

The person responsible for entering information about the study voluntarily provides these publications. These may be about anything related to the study.

General Publications

Study record dates

These dates track the progress of study record and summary results submissions to ClinicalTrials.gov. Study records and reported results are reviewed by the National Library of Medicine (NLM) to make sure they meet specific quality control standards before being posted on the public website.

Study Major Dates

Study Start (Actual)

March 8, 2011

Primary Completion (Actual)

February 2, 2022

Study Completion (Actual)

February 2, 2022

Study Registration Dates

First Submitted

February 25, 2011

First Submitted That Met QC Criteria

March 4, 2011

First Posted (Estimated)

March 7, 2011

Study Record Updates

Last Update Posted (Actual)

June 8, 2025

Last Update Submitted That Met QC Criteria

June 5, 2025

Last Verified

June 1, 2025

More Information

This information was retrieved directly from the website clinicaltrials.gov without any changes. If you have any requests to change, remove or update your study details, please contact register@clinicaltrials.gov. As soon as a change is implemented on clinicaltrials.gov, this will be updated automatically on our website as well.

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