A Phase I Study of Autologous Activated T-Cells Expressing a 2nd Generation GD2 Chimeric Antigen Receptor, IL-15, and iCaspase9 Safety Switch Administered To Patients With Relapsed/Refractory Neuroblastoma or Relapsed/Refractory Osteosarcoma

Who is this study for? Patients with relapsed/refractory neuroblastoma or relapsed/refractory osteosarcoma
What treatments are being studied? iC9.GD2.CAR.IL-15 T-cells+Cyclophosphamide+Fludarabine
Status: Recruiting
Location: See all (2) locations...
Intervention Type: Drug, Biological
Study Type: Interventional
Study Phase: Phase 1
SUMMARY

The body has different ways of fighting infections and disease. No single way seems perfect for fighting cancer. This research study combines two different ways of fighting disease: antibodies and T cells. Antibodies are molecules that fight infections and protect your body from diseases caused by bacteria and toxic substances. Antibodies work by sticking to those bacteria or substances, which stops them from growing and causing bad effects. T cells are special infection-fighting blood cells that can kill other cells, including tumor cells or cells that are infected. Both antibodies and T cells have been used to treat patients with cancers. They both have shown promise, but neither alone has been enough to cure most patients. This multicenter study is designed to combine both T cells and antibodies in order to create a more effective treatment. The treatment that is being researched is called autologous T lymphocyte chimeric antigen receptor cells (CAR) cells targeted against the disialoganglioside (GD2) antigen that express Interleukin (IL)-15, and the inducible caspase 9 safety switch (iC9), also known as iC9.GD2.CAR.IL-15 T cells.

Eligibility
Participation Requirements
Sex: All
Minimum Age: 1
Healthy Volunteers: f
View:

• Written HIPAA authorization signed by legal guardian.

• Adequate performance status as defined by Lansky or Karnofsky performance status of ≥ 60 (Lansky for \<16 years of age).

• Life expectancy ≥12 weeks.

• Histological confirmation of neuroblastoma or ganglioneuroblastoma at initial diagnosis. Bone marrow samples are acceptable as confirmation of neuroblastoma, confirmation of osteosarcoma at diagnosis

• High-risk neuroblastoma with persistent/refractory or relapsed disease, defined as:

‣ First or greater relapse of neuroblastoma following completion of aggressive multi-drug frontline therapy.

⁃ First episode of progressive neuroblastoma during aggressive multi-drug frontline therapy. Persistent/refractory neuroblastoma as defined by less than a complete response by the revised International Neuroblastoma Response Criteria (INRC) at the conclusion of at least 4 cycles of aggressive multidrug induction chemotherapy on or according to a high-risk neuroblastoma protocol (such as A3973 or ANBL0532).

⁃ Patients must be diagnosed with high risk neuroblastoma at initial diagnosis or if non-high risk at time of initial diagnosis must have had evidence of metastatic progression when \>18 months of age as defined in the protocol or relapsed or refractory osteosarcoma that is not responsive to standard treatment.

• Measurable or evaluable disease per Revised INRC for subjects with neuroblastoma or measurable disease by Response Evaluation Criteria In Solid Tumors Criteria (RECIST) v1.1 criteria for subjects with osteosarcoma.

• Adequate central nervous system function as defined by:

‣ No known Central Nervous System ( CNS) disease

⁃ No seizure disorder requiring antiepileptic drug therapy

Locations
United States
Georgia
Emory - Winship Cancer Institute
WITHDRAWN
Atlanta
North Carolina
Lineberger Comprehensive Cancer Center at University of North Carolina - Chapel Hill
RECRUITING
Chapel Hill
Contact Information
Primary
Lori Stravers
UNCImmunotherapy@med.unc.edu
919-445-4208
Backup
Lauren Higgins
UNCImmunotherapy@med.unc.edu
+1 (919) 966-4432
Time Frame
Start Date: 2019-02-19
Estimated Completion Date: 2044-06-19
Participants
Target number of participants: 18
Treatments
Experimental: iC9.GD2.CAR.IL-15 T-cells
The continuous reassessment method (CRM) will be used to estimate the maximum-tolerated dose (MTD) of cells that to be given in dose escalation cohorts comprised of 2-6 subjects. The final MTD will be the dose with estimated probability of dose limiting toxicity (DLT) closest to the target toxicity rate of 20%. Three cell doses will be evaluated: 0.5 x 10\^6 cells/kg, 1.0 x 10\^6 cells/kg, 1.5 x 10\^6 cells/kg. Cohort enrollment will be staggered and each subject must complete at least 2 weeks of the cell treatment without incident of DLT before another subject can be enrolled at that dose level. A minimum of two subjects must complete the 4-week post-infusion DLT period before enrollment at the next higher dose level will be considered. If dose level 1 is determined to be above a tolerable dose, de-escalation would occur to dose level -1 where subjects would receive 0.25 x 10\^6 cells/kg.
Sponsors
Collaborators: United States Department of Defense, Bellicum Pharmaceuticals, National Cancer Institute (NCI)
Leads: UNC Lineberger Comprehensive Cancer Center

This content was sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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