Overview

Enfortumab Vedotin in Patients With Advanced Small Bowel Adenocarcinoma Refractory or Intolerant to Platinum-based Combination Therapy

Status:
RECRUITING
Trial end date:
2028-09-30
Target enrollment:
Participant gender:
Summary
Small bowel adenocarcinoma is a rare cancer with a poor prognosis. For patients with locally advanced or metastatic disease, the usual first treatment is chemotherapy with platinum-based combinations such as FOLFOX or CapeOX. However, once the cancer grows after this treatment or the side effects become too severe, there is no widely accepted standard second-line therapy, and outcomes are generally poor. New treatment options are therefore urgently needed. Recent retrospective research from our group has shown that the majority of the small bowel adenocarcinomas strongly express a protein called Nectin-4 on the surface of cancer cells. High Nectin-4 expression was also associated with poorer survival, suggesting that Nectin-4 could be a crucial treatment target in this disease. Enfortumab vedotin is a targeted anticancer drug called an antibody-drug conjugate. It combines an antibody that recognizes Nectin-4 with vedotin, a cytotoxic anticancer agent (payload). After enfortumab vedotin binds to Nectin-4 on the tumor cell surface, it is taken up into the cell and releases the anticancer payload, which damages the cell's internal structure and leads to cell death and apoptosis. Enfortumab vedotin has already shown meaningful antitumor activity and an acceptable safety profile in patients with advanced urothelial carcinoma and is approved over the world. However, its efficacy has never been formally evaluated in patients with small bowel adenocarcinoma. ENVELOPE is a multicenter, single-arm, phase II investigator-initiated trial designed to evaluate the efficacy and safety of enfortumab vedotin in patients with locally advanced or metastatic small bowel adenocarcinoma that has progressed during or after, or is intolerant to, platinum-based combination chemotherapy (FOLFOX or CapeOX). Eligible patients are adults (aged 18 years or older) with histologically or cytologically confirmed small bowel adenocarcinoma, a good performance status, adequate organ function, and at least one measurable lesion on a CT scan. Patients who have genomic alterations that make them candidates for previously approved "tumor-agnostic" targeted drugs (for example, high microsatellite instability or high tumor mutational burden) must already have tried and not benefited from, or not tolerated, those treatments. Testing positive for Nectin-4 is not required to take part in this study. Participants will receive enfortumab vedotin as an intravenous infusion at a dose of 1.25 mg/kg on days 1, 8, and 15 of each 28-day treatment cycle. Treatment will continue as long as the cancer does not grow and side effects remain manageable. Tumor scans with contrast-enhanced CT will be performed every 8 weeks up to week 24 and every 12 weeks thereafter to monitor the response of the enfortumab vedotin. The primary objective is to determine the proportion of patients achieving a tumor response to enfortumab vedotin, as assessed by independent radiologic review. Key secondary objectives include progression-free survival, overall survival, duration of response, and safety profiling. In addition, this study includes a prespecified translational research program. Tumor samples will be examined for Nectin-4 expression using immunohistochemistry, and researchers will investigate the relationship between Nectin-4 levels and the effects of enfortumab vedotin. Blood and tissue samples will also be collected before treatment, during treatment, and at the time of cancer progression, when possible, for detailed "multi-omics" analyses. These translational studies aim to elucidate why some patients respond whereas others do not, and to identify biomarkers that could inform future treatment strategies for small bowel adenocarcinoma. The ENVELOPE trial has been approved by the Institutional Review Board of the National Cancer Center, Japan, as well as by the ethics committees at participating sites. The study is funded by the Japan Agency for Medical Research and Development (AMED), and enfortumab vedotin is supplied by Astellas Pharma. Enrollment began in October 2025 and is planned to continue through October 2027, with patients followed for at least 12 months after the last participant is enrolled.
Phase:
PHASE2
Details
Lead Sponsor:
National Cancer Center, Japan
Collaborator:
Astellas Pharma Inc
Treatments:
enfortumab vedotin