Clinical Trials Logo

Clinical Trial Summary

This study is designed to identify the best tolerated doses of Lutathera® and Azedra® when co-administered to treat midgut neuroendocrine tumors. These drugs are radioactive drugs, known as radionuclide therapy, and are both approved in the treatment of midgut neuroendocrine tumor as single agents (not together). Currently, the safest and best tolerated doses of these drugs (when combined) is unknown. That is the purpose of this clinical trial.


Clinical Trial Description

Azedra and Lutatheraare are FDA-approved radioactive drugs designed to treat specific tumor cells. These drugs are a combination of the radiation (131-Iodine, 177-lutetium) and a protein that targets the tumor cell (MIBG or DOTATATE). Because these proteins are attracted to, and stick to, the tumor, the radiation is centered in the tumors. This kills more tumor cells and minimizes radiation-damage to healthy tissues, like the heart and lungs. Two organs still absorb some of the radiation, though: bone marrow and the kidney. These organs limit how much radiation can be given to tumors, but we don't know how much radiation is too much. Too much radiation to bone marrow can result in anemia. Too much radiation to the kidneys can result in kidney failure. From prior radiation therapies, we have a general idea of how much radiation we can give safely. Azedra and Lutathera have never been given together. We want to give them together because many times, tumors are actually groups of different types of cells. This means, not all the cells respond to therapy the same way. If some tumor cells survive therapy, the tumor will continue to grow and eventually come back. We know some mid-gut neuroendocrine tumors (NETs) have targets for DOTATATE and some other mid-gut NETs have targets for MIBG. We also have now identified that some people with mid-gut NETs have different tumors: some with targets for MIBG and some with targets for DOTATATE. For these people, this means treating only with Azedra or Lutathera will not be enough to treat their cancer. They need both radioactive drugs. Because we are combining these radioactive drugs, this study is known as a first-in-man study. We are also using a special imaging to help us estimate the radiation dose to the bone marrow and to the kidneys. This is what decides the final dose of Azedra and Lutathera. After receiving a standard treatment of Lutathera, participants are asked to undergo imaging to verify they have both MIBG and DOTATATE tumor types: - participants are given a tracer dose of Azedra - a special camera (SPECT/CT) collects images (scans) - imaging (scans) are done over 4 calendar days - blood samples are taken at that time, too, to measure the circulating amount of tracer doses If the scans show a participant does not have both MIBG and DOTATATE receptors, they continue with standard therapy (Lutathera only). Participants are asked to still undergo study assessments to provide a comparison group. If the scans show a participant has both MIBG and DOTATATE receptors, combined therapy is administered: - a customized dose of Lutathera is given on day 1 of a treatment cycle. This is given outpatient. - a customized dose of Azedra is given on day 2 of a treatment cycle. This is given inpatient (admitted to the hospital). - participants are monitored through blood tests to identify the side effects of therapy. Each participant can have up to 2 cycles of therapy. The cycles are 12 weeks apart. The doses for Lutathera and Azedra are decided based on radiation to the bone marrow and radiation to the kidney. Doses are decided by how well other participants have done on this study. Participants have life long follow-up for this study. This is very important, because a study like this has not been done. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT04614766
Study type Interventional
Source University of Iowa
Contact David Bushnell, M.D.
Phone 319-356-1616
Email david-bushnell@uiowa.edu
Status Recruiting
Phase Phase 1/Phase 2
Start date September 30, 2022
Completion date October 31, 2025

See also
  Status Clinical Trial Phase
Completed NCT01218555 - Study of Everolimus (RAD001) in Combination With Lenalidomide Phase 1
Recruiting NCT03412877 - Administration of Autologous T-Cells Genetically Engineered to Express T-Cell Receptors Reactive Against Neoantigens in People With Metastatic Cancer Phase 2
Recruiting NCT05556473 - F-Tryptophan PET/CT in Human Cancers Phase 1
Completed NCT03273712 - Dosimetry-Guided, Peptide Receptor Radiotherapy (PRRT) With 90Y-DOTA- tyr3-Octreotide (90Y-DOTATOC) Phase 2
Recruiting NCT05636618 - Targeted Alpha-Particle Therapy for Advanced SSTR2 Positive Neuroendocrine Tumors Phase 1/Phase 2
Terminated NCT03986593 - Cryoablation of Bone Metastases From Endocrine Tumors N/A
Recruiting NCT04584008 - Targeted Agent Evaluation in Digestive Cancers in China Based on Molecular Characteristics N/A
Completed NCT02815969 - The Indol Profile; Exploring the Metabolic Profile of Neuroendocrine Tumors
Completed NCT02441062 - Impact of Ga-68 DOTATOC PET-CT Imaging in Management of Neuroendocrine Tumors Phase 2
Active, not recruiting NCT02174549 - Dose-defining Study of Tirapazamine Combined With Embolization in Liver Cancer Phase 1/Phase 2
Completed NCT02134639 - PET-CT Imaging of Neuro-endocrine Tumors and Preliminary Clinical Evaluation N/A
Completed NCT02132468 - A Ph 2 Study of Fosbretabulin in Subjects w Pancreatic or Gastrointestinal Neuroendocrine Tumors w Elevated Biomarkers Phase 2
Recruiting NCT01201096 - Neo-adjuvant Peptide Receptor Mediated Radiotherapy With 177Lutetium in Front of Curative Intended Liver Transplantation in Patients With Hepatic Metastasis of Neuroendocrine Tumors (NEO-LEBE) N/A
Terminated NCT01163526 - Perfusion CT as a Predictor of Treatment Response in Patients With Hepatic Malignancies N/A
Completed NCT01099228 - Combination Targeted Radiotherapy in Neuroendocrine Tumors N/A
Completed NCT00171873 - Antiproliferative Effect of Octreotide in Patients With Metastasized Neuroendocrine Tumors of the Midgut Phase 3
Active, not recruiting NCT05077384 - Open-label Study of Surufatinib in Japanese Patients Phase 1/Phase 2
Recruiting NCT04544098 - Lutathera in People With Gastroenteropancreatic (GEP), Bronchial or Unknown Primary Neuroendocrine Tumors That Have Spread to the Liver Early Phase 1
Active, not recruiting NCT02736500 - Peptide Receptor Radionuclide Therapy With 177Lu-Dotatate Associated With Metronomic Capecitabine In Patients Affected By Aggressive Gastro-Etero-Pancreatic Neuroendocrine Tumors Phase 1/Phase 2
Completed NCT00978211 - DOTA-TOC in Metastasized Neuroendocrine Tumors Phase 2