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Combining PD-1 Blockade, CD137 Agonism, and Adoptive Cell Therapy for Metastatic Melanoma

Trial Status: complete

This early phase I trial studies tumor infiltrating lymphocyte (TIL) therapy, nivolumab, and aldesleukin in treating patients with melanoma that has spread from where it started to other places in the body that cannot be removed by surgery. Lymphocytes are a type of white blood cell that help the body fight infection and other diseases. TIL therapy involves taking lymphocytes from patients' tumors, growing them in the laboratory in large numbers, using the drugs aldesleukin and urelumab during part of the process, and then giving them back to the patient which may help fight the tumor. Monoclonal antibodies, such as nivolumab, may block tumor growth in different ways by targeting certain cells. Aldesleukin may stimulate white blood cells to kill tumor cells. Giving TIL therapy, nivolumab, and aldesleukin may be a better treatment for metastatic melanoma.