Avelumab

Clinical trials with Avelumab are studying how well it works in different cancers and how safe it is in specific patient groups. These studies include maintenance treatment, first-line treatment, and combination therapy in adults and children with advanced, metastatic, or recurrent tumors. The trials measure outcomes such as survival, tumor response, disease control, and quality of life.

Table of Contents

Overview of Avelumab trials

Clinical trials with Avelumab are testing it in many cancer settings, often together with other treatments such as chemotherapy, targeted therapy, or another immunotherapy drug.[1][2]

Across the trials, the main goals are to check safety, tolerability, survival, tumor response, and whether treatment can help after earlier therapy or as part of first-line treatment.[1][3]

Cancer types studied

The trials cover a wide range of cancers, including urothelial cancer, bladder cancer, muscle invasive bladder cancer, head and neck squamous cell carcinoma, penile squamous cell carcinoma, colorectal cancer, gastric cancer, gastroesophageal junction cancer, renal cell carcinoma, gastrointestinal stromal tumor, neuroendocrine neoplasias, breast cancer, CNS tumors in children, and HPV-related cancers.[1][2][4]

Some studies are focused on very specific groups, such as patients with HPV-16 positive disease, patients with RAS/BRAF wild type metastatic colorectal cancer, or patients with a specific immune profile or gene change.[2][5][6]

Trial designs, phases, and who can join

Most Avelumab studies in this set are Phase 2 or Phase 3 trials, which means they are testing how well the treatment works and continuing to track safety in larger groups.[1][3]

There is also a Phase 1 study in children with primary CNS tumors, where the main focus is safety, tolerability, and dose finding.[4]

Many studies enroll adults with advanced, metastatic, recurrent, or unresectable disease, meaning the cancer cannot be removed by surgery or has come back or spread.[1][3]

Some trials study Avelumab as maintenance treatment, which means treatment given after initial therapy if the cancer has not progressed.[1][7]

Main endpoints and what they mean

Several trials measure overall survival (OS), which is the time from study entry or randomization until death from any cause.[2][7]

Many studies use progression-free survival (PFS), which means the time before the cancer gets worse or the patient dies.[1][3]

Other trials measure disease-free survival (DFS), objective response rate (ORR), disease control rate (DCR), and pathological complete response (pCR).[1][2][8]

Some studies also measure quality of life, safety events, and immune blood markers, especially when the goal is to understand treatment burden or immune-related toxicity.[3][9]

Key trial highlights

The PULSE trial (NCT03774901) is a Phase 2 study in locally advanced or metastatic squamous cell penile carcinoma. It tests maintenance Avelumab after first-line platinum-based chemotherapy and measures disease-free progression, with the disease-free survival time counted from the start of Avelumab until progression or death.[1]

The metastatic colorectal cancer trial (NCT05291156) is a Phase 2 randomized study of Avelumab plus cetuximab versus cetuximab alone in pre-treated RAS/BRAF wild-type patients. Its main outcome is overall survival.[2]

The AVETUX-HN study (2025-521738-27-00) compares two cycles versus four cycles of combination therapy with cetuximab, Avelumab, cisplatin, and docetaxel in recurrent metastatic head and neck cancer. The main endpoint is quality of life at 18 weeks, measured with the QLQ-C30 questionnaire.[3]

The DEPECA-1 trial (NCT07110038) studies first-line enfortumab vedotin plus Avelumab in locally advanced or metastatic penile squamous cell carcinoma. It measures objective response rate using RECIST 1.1, a standard scan-based response system.[10]

The A-Brave study (NCT02926196) tested one year of adjuvant Avelumab after curative-intent treatment for high-risk triple negative breast cancer. Its main outcome was disease-free survival.[8]

The AVESEC trial (2025-524077-16-00) is a Phase 2 maintenance study in metastatic urothelial carcinoma after second-line platinum-based chemotherapy and progression on earlier pembrolizumab plus enfortumab vedotin. It compares Avelumab with best supportive care and uses blinded independent central review for progression-free survival.[11]

Special populations and biomarker studies

Some studies focus on special groups, such as children with primary CNS tumors, where the trial looks at safety, dose-limiting toxicities, and progression-free survival in an expansion part.[4]

Other trials use biomarkers, which are measurable signs in the body, to understand who may benefit most or who may have toxicity. One study in solid tumors looks at immune blood markers and autoantibodies to explore immune-related toxicities of checkpoint inhibitors, including Avelumab.[9]

The REGOMUNE study (NCT03475953) is a Phase 1/2 trial in advanced or metastatic solid tumors. In Phase 1 it studies safety, dose-limiting toxicities, and the recommended Phase 2 dose, while Phase 2 measures different activity endpoints across several tumor cohorts.[6]

The ProTarget study (NCT04341181) uses genomic profiling, which means looking at tumor genes to guide treatment choice. In this trial, Avelumab is one of several approved targeted or immune treatments being studied for anti-tumor activity and safety in advanced cancer.[5]

Trial ID Phase Condition studied Status Enrollment
NCT03774901Phase 2Locally advanced or metastatic squamous cell penile carcinomaAuthorised28
NCT05291156Phase 2Metastatic colorectal cancerAuthorised173
2025-521738-27-00Phase 2Recurrent metastatic head and neck cancerAuthorised126
NCT07110038Phase 2Locally advanced or metastatic penile squamous cell carcinomaAuthorised25
NCT05081180Phase 1Primary CNS tumors in childrenSuspended45
NCT20200057Low InterventionUrothelial cancer, bladder cancer, muscle invasive bladder cancerAuthorised121
NCT03260023Phase 1HPV-16 positive recurrent or metastatic malignanciesAuthorised142
NCT04258956Phase 2Gastrointestinal stromal tumorsCompleted58
NCT05289856Phase 2Advanced neuroendocrine neoplasias G3Completed30
2024-515825-27-00Phase 2Localized renal cell carcinomaAuthorised40
2023-505360-11-00Phase 2Solid tumor patients receiving immune checkpoint inhibitorsAuthorised441
NCT03475953Phase 1Advanced or metastatic solid tumorsAuthorised827
2024-513964-24-00Phase 3Previously untreated locally advanced head and neck squamous cell carcinomaAuthorised707
NCT02926196Phase 3High-risk triple negative breast cancerCompleted474
2025-524077-16-00Phase 2Metastatic urothelial carcinomaAuthorised144

Ongoing Clinical Trials on Avelumab

  • Study on Avelumab for Patients with High-Risk Triple Negative Breast Cancer

    Not recruiting

    1 1 1 1
    Investigated diseases:
    Investigated drugs:
    Italy
  • Study on the Effects of 3 vs 6 Cycles of Platinum-based Chemotherapy and Avelumab in Patients with Advanced Urothelial Cancer

    Not recruiting

    1 1 1
    Investigated drugs:
    France Spain
  • Study on Reduced Dose Intensity of Pembrolizumab and Drug Combination for Patients with Advanced or Metastatic Cancer Responding to Standard Immunotherapy

    Not recruiting

    1 1 1 1
    France
  • Study on the Safety of Avelumab, Lorlatinib, and Axitinib for Cancer Patients Continuing from Previous Trials

    Not recruiting

    1 1 1 1
    Belgium Denmark France Hungary Italy Poland +1
  • Study Comparing Avelumab, Cetuximab, and Radiotherapy with Standard Treatments for Patients with Advanced Head and Neck Squamous Cell Carcinoma

    Not recruiting

    1 1 1 1
    France
  • Study of BT8009 Alone or with Pembrolizumab for Patients with Advanced or Metastatic Bladder Cancer

    Not recruiting

    1 1 1 1
    Investigated diseases:
    Austria Belgium Bulgaria Czechia Denmark France +12
  • Study Comparing Avelumab and Standard Chemotherapy for Patients with Metastatic Colorectal Cancer with Microsatellite Instability

    Not recruiting

    1 1 1
    France
  • Study of Regorafenib and Avelumab for Adults with Advanced or Metastatic Solid Tumors

    Not recruiting

    1 1 1
    Investigated diseases:
    Investigated drugs:
    France
  • Study of Cabozantinib and Avelumab for Patients with Advanced Neuroendocrine Tumors G3 Resistant to Standard Chemotherapy

    Not recruiting

    1 1 1
    Investigated diseases:
    Investigated drugs:
    Germany
  • Study of TG4001 and Avelumab for Patients with Advanced HPV-16 Positive Cancers

    Not recruiting

    1 1 1
    Investigated drugs:
    France Spain

Glossary

  • Advanced cancer: Cancer that has grown beyond its original site or is difficult to remove completely.
  • Metastatic: Cancer that has spread to other parts of the body.
  • Locally advanced: Cancer that has grown nearby but has not clearly spread to distant organs.
  • Maintenance treatment: Treatment given after the first treatment to help keep the cancer under control.
  • First-line therapy: The first treatment used for a disease.
  • Objective response rate (ORR): The percentage of patients whose tumors shrink or disappear on scans.
  • Progression-free survival (PFS): The time a patient lives without the cancer getting worse.
  • Disease-free survival (DFS): The time after treatment when there is no sign that the cancer has returned.
  • Pathological complete response (pCR): No visible cancer found in the removed tissue after treatment.
  • Quality of life (QoL): How treatment affects daily life, comfort, and well-being.
  • RECIST: A standard way doctors use scans to measure whether a tumor is shrinking, stable, or growing.
  • Biomarker: A measurable sign in the body, such as a blood marker, that may help predict disease behavior or treatment effect.

References