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Immunotherapy (Axitinib, Avelumab, and Bavituximab) for the Treatment of Advanced Liver Cancer

Trial Status: administratively complete

This phase II trial tests how well axitinib, avelumab, and bavituximab works in treating patients with liver cancer that may have spread from where it first started to nearby tissue, lymph nodes, or distant parts of the body (advanced). Axitinib is an oral drug that works by reducing blood flow to a tumor. This effect can kill tumor cells directly and stimulate the immune system to kill tumor cells as well. Bavituximab and avelumab are medications called antibodies. Antibodies are molecules that are produced by the body that help fight infections or can be given as drugs to treat cancers. Bavituximab is an antibody produced in a laboratory that works by blocking a molecule called phosphatidylserine on tumor and immune cells to strengthen the immune system. Avelumab is an antibody produced in a laboratory that works by blocking a protein called Programmed Death-Ligand 1 (PD-L1), located on white blood cells, to activate the immune system. When phosphatidylserine or PD-L1 are blocked by antibodies, the immune system may be able to recognize and kill tumor cells. The use of these three drugs in combination may shrink tumors in the body more effectively than if any one drug is used by itself because each drug increases the immune system’s ability to kill cancers in a different way.