A Single-arm, Multicenter Phase II Clinical Study of QL1706 Combined With Chemotherapy and Anlotinib for the Treatment of Recurrent Ovarian Cancer
Ovarian cancer is one of the most common gynecologic malignancies, with considerable histologic heterogeneity; more than 90 % of cases are epithelial ovarian cancers. Because no reliable tools exist for early detection, approximately 70 % of patients are diagnosed at an advanced stage and have poor prognosis, and \>70 % experience relapse within 3 years of initial treatment. The standard first-line strategy combines cytoreductive surgery, platinum-based chemotherapy, and maintenance with PARP inhibitors. Management of recurrent disease remains one of the most challenging problems in clinical oncology. Bevacizumab, a recombinant humanized anti-VEGF monoclonal antibody that blocks endothelial proliferation and neovascularization, is the prototypic angiogenesis inhibitor used in ovarian cancer. However, randomized trials have demonstrated only progression-free survival (PFS) benefit, with no overall survival (OS) advantage. Pre-clinical data suggest that immunotherapy and anti-angiogenic agents can exert synergistic anti-tumor activity, yet clinical efforts combining bevacizumab with immune-checkpoint inhibitors in recurrent ovarian cancer-whether added to platinum-based chemotherapy, used as maintenance, or evaluated in chemotherapy-free regimens-have thus far been unsuccessful (except in clear-cell histology). Anlotinib is a novel oral multi-target tyrosine-kinase inhibitor that blocks VEGFR-2/3, FGFR 1-4, PDGFR-α/β, c-KIT, and RET, thereby potently suppressing angiogenesis. Accumulating evidence indicates that anlotinib plus chemotherapy is more effective than chemotherapy alone in advanced or recurrent ovarian cancer, with a manageable safety profile, showing encouraging efficacy and tolerability. Because conventional approaches for recurrent ovarian cancer are limited-particularly once platinum resistance develops-new therapeutic strategies are urgently needed. The best-characterized immune-checkpoint molecules are CTLA-4 and the PD-1/PD-L1 axis. Combined blockade of CTLA-4 and PD-1 has yielded impressive activity in several tumor types. Although single-agent checkpoint inhibitors produce modest response rates in recurrent ovarian cancer, preliminary data suggest that dual inhibition with anti-CTLA-4 plus anti-PD-1 antibodies may enhance therapeutic responses.QL1706 is a novel dual-target immunotherapeutic agent that has been approved for second-line monotherapy in cervical cancer.QL1706, developed by Qilu Pharmaceutical using the proprietary MabPair™ platform, is the first bispecific antibody simultaneously targeting PD-1 and CTLA-4, showing synergistic anti-tumor activity and favorable tolerability.The treatment of recurrent ovarian cancer remains a formidable challenge; therefore, proactive exploration of diverse combination regimens is essential to achieve optimal therapeutic efficacy and maximize survival benefit for patients.
• 1.Capable of understanding and voluntarily signing the written Informed Consent Form (ICF); the ICF must be signed before any study-specific procedures are performed.
⁃ Female, aged 18-70 years at the time of ICF signature. 3.Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group (ECOG) performance status 0-1. 4.Life expectancy ≥ 3 months. 5.Histologically confirmed epithelial ovarian cancer (including fallopian-tube and primary peritoneal carcinoma) that has recurred after standard platinum-based therapy:
⁃ Platinum-sensitive relapse (recurrence ≥ 6 months after completion of the last platinum-based therapy).
⁃ Platinum-resistant relapse (recurrence \< 6 months after completion of the last platinum-based therapy or progression while on PARP-inhibitor maintenance).
‣ Note: Maintenance PARP inhibitor or bevacizumab after CR/PR to prior chemotherapy, and hormonal therapy, are not counted as additional lines of therapy.
∙ At least one measurable lesion per RECIST v1.1. Lesions previously irradiated or treated with other loco-regional therapy can serve only as non-target lesions unless clear progression is documented or tumor viability is biopsy-proven.
∙ Archived or freshly obtained tumor tissue (primary or relapse) must be available for biomarker analyses. Five unstained formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded (FFPE) slides or a tissue block are required for central PD-L1 testing (slides preferred). If re-biopsy is judged unsafe, the number of slides may be reduced after discussion with the medical monitor.
∙ Adequate organ function at screening:
‣ Hematology:
‣ Hb ≥ 90 g/L ANC ≥ 1.5 × 10⁹/L PLT ≥ 100 × 10⁹/L
‣ Biochemistry:
‣ Albumin ≥ 29 g/L ALT/AST \< 3 × ULN (\< 5 × ULN if liver metastases) TBIL ≤ 1.5 × ULN Creatinine ≤ 1.5 × ULN 9.Women of child-bearing potential must have a negative serum pregnancy test within 3 days before first dose. If sexually active with a non-sterilized male partner, they must use a highly effective contraceptive method from screening until 6 months after the last study-dose; rhythm or withdrawal methods are not acceptable.
• The need for additional cytoreductive surgery is at the investigator's discretion.