
Combining the WT1 cancer vaccine galinpepimut-S with nivolumab “demonstrated a tolerable toxicity profile” and induced immune responses in a subset of in patients with WT1-expressing diffuse pleural mesothelioma (DPM), according to results of a recent phase 1 study.
Prashasti Agrawal, MD, of the Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, and colleagues conducted the study and presented their findings during the 2024 American Society of Clinical Oncology Annual Meeting.
It was important to evaluate the combination because DPM is an “aggressive malignancy with poor outcomes” that has only 2 therapeutic regimens approved by the US Food and Drug Administration, Dr. Agrawal and colleagues explained. WT1, a protein that is “often presented on the surface of DPM,” is an “ideal therapeutic target” in this setting, according to the study investigators. A phase 1 study previously “confirmed the safety and immunogenicity” of galinpepimut-S, which is a tetravalent, nonhuman leukocyte antigen-restricted, heteroclitic WT1-specific peptide vaccine, in patients with WT1-expressing cancers.