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Imlygic

talimogene laherparepvec
Oncolytic Viral Therapy (HSV-1 Based) Amgen FDA Approved 2015
Indications Dosing Forms Contraindications Warnings Adverse Reactions Pharmacology Clinical Studies Tumor Types
1. Indications and Usage

Unresectable cutaneous, subcutaneous, and nodal lesions in patients with melanoma recurrent after initial surgery.

2. Dosage and Administration

Initial dose: Up to 4 mL of 10⁶ PFU/mL injected intratumorally
Second dose (3 weeks later): Up to 4 mL of 10⁸ PFU/mL
Subsequent doses: Up to 4 mL of 10⁸ PFU/mL every 2 weeks
Inject largest lesion(s) first, then remaining lesions. Volume per lesion based on size (0.1 mL for ≤0.5 cm to 4 mL for >5 cm).
Continue for minimum 6 months unless other treatment required or no injectable lesions remain.

3. Dosage Forms and Strengths

Injection: 10⁶ PFU/mL (1 mL vial) for initial dose; 10⁸ PFU/mL (1 mL vial) for subsequent doses

4. Contraindications

Immunocompromised patients (including those with HIV/AIDS, leukemia, lymphoma, on immunosuppressive therapy). Pregnant women.

5. Warnings and Precautions
  • Herpetic Infection: Accidental exposure may lead to herpes infection. Healthcare providers and close contacts should avoid direct contact with injected lesions, dressings, or body fluids. Use universal precautions.
  • Injection Site Complications: Necrosis or ulceration at injection site. Impaired wound healing in lesions that necrose.
  • Immune-Mediated Events: Vitiligo, vasculitis, pneumonitis, glomerulonephritis, worsening psoriasis reported.
  • Plasmacytoma: Has been reported.
6. Adverse Reactions
Most Common Adverse Reactions

Fatigue (50%), chills (49%), pyrexia (43%), nausea (36%), influenza-like illness (30%), injection site pain (28%), vomiting (21%), headache (19%), diarrhea (19%), myalgia (18%), arthralgia (12%), pain in extremity (11%)

Fatigue
50%
Chills
49%
Pyrexia
43%
Nausea
36%
Influenza-Like Illness
30%
Injection Site Pain
28%
Vomiting
21%
Headache
19%
Diarrhea
19%
Myalgia
18%

Consult the complete prescribing information for a comprehensive list of adverse reactions and their frequencies.

12. Clinical Pharmacology
Mechanism of Action

Talimogene laherparepvec (T-VEC) is a genetically modified herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1). Key modifications: (1) Deletion of ICP34.5 (neurovirulence factor) limits replication to tumor cells while sparing normal cells; (2) Deletion of ICP47 prevents inhibition of antigen presentation and drives expression of US11 early, which promotes viral replication selectively in tumor cells; (3) Insertion of human GM-CSF gene — expressed upon viral replication, GM-CSF recruits and activates dendritic cells, promoting systemic anti-tumor immune responses. The virus lyses tumor cells directly (oncolytic effect) while simultaneously releasing tumor antigens and GM-CSF to stimulate systemic immunity (abscopal effect).

Pharmacokinetics

Not applicable — local injection of live virus. Viral shedding from injection site detected in 3% of swabbed lesions. Viremia not detected. Biodistribution limited primarily to injection site.

14. Clinical Studies

Clinical efficacy and safety data supporting the approval are available in the full prescribing information and from the clinical trials listed below.

Pivotal Clinical Trials
Additional Resources
Approved Tumor Types
External Resources