TPS4625 Background: Non-muscle invasive bladder cancer (NMIBC) comprises approximately three-quarters of newly diagnosed cases of bladder cancer. Based on the risk of disease progression, NMIBC is categorized into low, intermediate, and high risk, with high-risk NMIBC patients facing a 5-year disease progression rate of up to 40%. The current standard treatment for high-risk NMIBC involves transurethral resection of the bladder tumor (TURBT) combined with intravesical Bacillus Calmette-Guérin (BCG) instillation as adjuvant therapy. In cases of BCG instillation treatment failure, the standard approach is radical cystectomy. Multiple studies have reported HER2 positivity in 20-44% of NMIBC cases, and HER2 overexpression (immunohistochemistry ≥2+) is closely linked to the progression and adverse prognosis of bladder cancer. Consequently, HER2 may serve as a novel therapeutic target for bladder cancer. Disitamab Vedotin (DV; RC48-ADC) is an antibody-drug conjugate (ADC) comprising a fully humanized HER2-directed monoclonal antibody conjugated to monomethyl auristatin E (MMAE) via a protease-cleavable mc-vc linker. Results from a Phase II clinical trial (NCT03507166) suggest that Disitamab Vedotin exhibits favorable efficacy and safety in HER2-positive metastatic urothelial carcinoma patients who have previously failed chemotherapy. This clinical trial aims to investigate the efficacy and safety of RC48-ADC as adjuvant or rescue therapy for high-risk NMIBC with HER2 overexpression and to explore molecular biomarkers predicting the efficacy of RC48-ADC. Methods: This multicenter, Phase II clinical trial will enroll two cohorts: Cohort A, consisting of 52 patients undergoing first-line adjuvant therapy, and Cohort B, with 25 patients receiving rescue therapy after BCG instillation failure, both exhibiting HER2 overexpression in high-risk NMIBC. Following the Simon two-stage optimal design, the first stage will involve enrolling 19 patients in Cohort A and 12 patients in Cohort B. After safety and baseline assessments, both cohorts will undergo six cycles of treatment with RC48-ADC (120 mg intravenous infusion every two weeks), totaling 12 weeks of treatment. Primary endpoints include safety, 12-month recurrence-free rate (Cohort A), and 3-month clinical complete response rate (Cohort B). Secondary endpoints encompass the 6-month recurrence-free rate (Cohort A), duration of response (Cohort B), recurrence-free survival, progression-free survival, overall survival, and quality of life (assessed through eEuroQoL EQ-5D and FACT-BI). Additionally, exploratory endpoints will investigate the relationship between biomarkers in tumor tissues, blood, and urine, and treatment efficacy. Clinical trial information: NCT05996952 .
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