Abstract
Balstilimab (anti-programmed death 1) and zalifrelimab (anti-CTLA-4) are two new checkpoint inhibitors that have emerged as promising investigational agents for the treatment of cervical cancer, particularly in the setting of previously-treated, recurrent/metastatic disease. Here we describe the rationale and design of RaPiDS (NCT03894215), a two-arm Phase II study evaluating the safety, tolerability and efficacy of balstilimab administered alone or in combination with zalifrelimab in patients with advanced cervical cancer who progressed after first-line, platinum-based chemotherapy. Patients will be randomized in a 1:1 ratio. The primary end point is objective response rate, and key secondary objectives include safety, duration of response, progression-free survival, overall survival and quality of life outcomes.
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O’Malley, D. M., Randall, L. M., Jackson, C. G., Coleman, R. L., Hays, J. L., Moore, K. N., … Monk, B. J. (2021). RaPiDS (GOG-3028): Randomized Phase II study of balstilimab alone or in combination with zalifrelimab in cervical cancer. Future Oncology, 17(26), 3433–3443. https://doi.org/10.2217/fon-2021-0529
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