AI Article Synopsis

  • The summary discusses two studies evaluating the safety and efficacy of N-803 (Anktiva) combined with the standard treatment BCG for patients with non-muscle invasive bladder cancer (NMIBC).
  • The Phase 1b study used increasing doses of N-803 in BCG-naive participants, while the Phase 2/3 study included participants with BCG-unresponsive disease and a cohort treated solely with N-803.
  • Key findings showed that the combination treatment was effective, eliminating NMIBC in all nine BCG-naive participants and leading to long-lasting results, with a significant percentage of participants avoiding bladder surgery and experiencing minimal adverse effects.

Article Abstract

What Is This Summary About?: This is a summary of two studies that looked at the safety and effectiveness of a potential new treatment, N-803 (Anktiva), in combination with a standard treatment bacillus Calmette-Guerin (BCG) for people with .One study was a Phase 1b study that tested increasing doses of N-803 in combination with the same dose of BCG in people with NMIBC who had never received BCG previously (BCG-naive). The other study is a of N-803 and BCG in people with NMIBC whose cancer wasn't eliminated by BCG alone (BCGunresponsive).

What Happened In The Studies?: In the Phase 1b study, the nine participants were split into three groups of 3 participants who received a dose of 100, 200, or 400 μg N-803 along with a standard 50 mg dose of BCG. In the Phase 2/3 study, one group (cohort A) of participants with carcinoma in situ (CIS) disease and another group (cohort B) with papillary disease were treated with 400 μg N-803 plus 50 mg BCG. There was also a cohort C that received only 400 μg N-803. Treatments were delivered directly into the bladder once a week for 6 weeks in a row.

What Were The Key Takeaways?: N-803 plus BCG eliminated NMIBC in all nine BCG-naive participants and the effects were long-lasting, with participants remaining NMIBC-free for a range of 8.3 to 9.2 years.As reported in 2022, cancer was eliminated in 58 of 82 (71%) participants with BCG-unresponsive CIS disease and the effect was also long-lasting. Importantly, approximately 90% of the successfully treated participants avoided surgical removal of the bladder. In cohort B participants with papillary disease, 40 of 72 (55.4%) were cancer-free 12 months after treatment. N-803 used alone was only effective in 2 of 10 participants. In both studies, the combination of N-803 and BCG was found to be associated with very few adverse events.Based on results from the Phase 2/3 study, the U.S. Food and Drug Association (FDA) approved the use of N-803 plus BCG for the treatment of BCG-unresponsive bladder CIS with or without Ta/T1 papillary disease. NCT02138734 (Phase 1b study), NCT03022825 (Phase 2/3 study).

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11524197PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/14796694.2024.2363744DOI Listing

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  • The Phase 1b study used increasing doses of N-803 in BCG-naive participants, while the Phase 2/3 study included participants with BCG-unresponsive disease and a cohort treated solely with N-803.
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