Cecilia Sgadari, Biancamaria Scoppio, Orietta Picconi, Antonella Tripiciano, Francesca Maria Gaiani, Vittorio Francavilla, Angela Arancio, Massimo Campagna, Clelia Palladino, Sonia Moretti, Paolo Monini, Lucia Brambilla, Barbara Ensoli
Cancer research communications 2024 Aug 01Kaposi sarcoma is a rare angioproliferative disease associated with human herpes virus-8 (HHV-8) infection. Kaposi sarcoma is frequent and aggressive in HIV-infected people, whereas the classic form (CKS) generally has an indolent course. Notably, all conventional therapies against Kaposi sarcoma have only temporary efficacy. We have previously shown that indinavir, a HIV protease-inhibitor with direct antiangiogenic and antitumor activity, is safe and effective in patients with early CKS, whereas effects are less prominent in advanced disease, probably due to the larger tumor mass. Therefore, the clinical response to indinavir was assessed in patients with advanced CKS after debulking chemotherapy. This was a monocentric phase 2 trial in elderly with progressive/advanced CKS treated with debulking chemotherapy and indinavir combined, followed by a maintenance phase with indinavir alone. Secondary endpoints included safety and Kaposi sarcoma biomarker evaluation.All evaluable patients (22) responded to debulking therapy. Out of these, 16 entered the indinavir maintenance phase. The overall response rate at end of maintenance was 75% (estimated median response-duration 43 months). Moreover, most responders showed further clinical improvements (lesion number/nodularity) during maintenance and post-treatment follow-up. Notably, after relapse, progressors did not require systemic Kaposi sarcoma therapy and showed clinical improvements (including disease stabilization) remaining on study. Responders also showed immune status amelioration with a consistent B-cell increase and positive changes of other biomarkers, including anti-HHV-8 natural killer activity. In advanced CKS a strategy combining indinavir and chemotherapy is safe and associated with high and durable response rates and it could be rapidly adopted for the clinical management of these patients. This phase-2 trial showed that the HIV protease inhibitor indinavir may boost and extend the duration of the effects of chemotherapy in elderly with advanced progressive classic Kaposi sarcoma, without additional toxicity. Further, the amelioration of the immune status seen in responders suggests a better control of HHV-8 infection and tumor-cell killing. Thus, indinavir combined with chemotherapy may represent an important tool for the clinical management of classic Kaposi sarcoma in elderly patients. ©2024 The Authors; Published by the American Association for Cancer Research.
Cecilia Sgadari, Biancamaria Scoppio, Orietta Picconi, Antonella Tripiciano, Francesca Maria Gaiani, Vittorio Francavilla, Angela Arancio, Massimo Campagna, Clelia Palladino, Sonia Moretti, Paolo Monini, Lucia Brambilla, Barbara Ensoli. Clinical Efficacy of the HIV Protease Inhibitor Indinavir in Combination with Chemotherapy for Advanced Classic Kaposi Sarcoma Treatment: A Single-Arm, Phase II Trial in the Elderly. Cancer research communications. 2024 Aug 01;4(8):2112-2122
PMID: 39028943
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