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Clinical Trial Summary

The purpose of this study is to test if interleukin-2, a drug that stimulates the immune system, can be used after chemotherapy to slow the progression of your disease. We also want to test what the best dose of interleukin-2 is that can be used safely at home.

Interleukin-2, abbreviated as IL2, is a naturally produced growth hormone for the immune cells in our body. It stimulates the growth of the immune cells and enhances their ability to fight infections and cancers. In people with cancer, the immune cells are typically suppressed and became even more so after irradiation and chemotherapy treatment. By giving you more IL2 we hope to enhance the immune system so that it can fight the cancer better, control cancer growth and shrink the cancer.


Clinical Trial Description

There are two treatment phases in this study. But before you begin in the study, we will need to find out whether you are eligible for the study. You will undergo the following procedures.

- Medical history review and physical exam

- Blood tests for hematology, chemistries, PSA, and immune assays (approximately 4 tablespoons of blood)

- EKG

- CT scan of the abdomen and pelvis and a bone scan

- Complete a pain questionnaire, quality of life questionnaire, pain medication diary, and symptom diary

The initial treatment phase of this study consists of chemotherapy drug given weekly. You will receive 3 weekly chemotherapy treatments followed by 1 week with no treatment. Three weeks of treatment followed by one week of no treatment is considered 1 cycle, and you will receive a total of 4 cycles of chemotherapy over a 16-week period. Taxotere is given intravenously in the clinic on the 1st day of each weekly treatment.

Treatment with taxotere is a currently accepted treatment for this stage prostate cancer. Your doctor may recommend you receive taxotere even if you do not participate in this study. During this phase of treatment, you will have blood draws on treatment weeks prior to having the chemotherapy. You will have a PSA drawn every month (weeks 5, 9, and 13). We will ask you to complete a pain questionnaire, quality of life questionnaire, pain medication diary, and symptom diary at weeks 5, 9, and 13. Some of the questions may be personal, such as "I am satisfied with my sex life" and "I worry about dying". You do not have to answer these questions if you do not want to. You will also have a physical exam at the beginning of your 3rd cycle of treatment (week 9).

The second phase of the treatment program is the experimental part: immunotherapy with IL2. You will be assigned to receive one of 4 doses of IL2. This is because we are testing what is the highest dose of IL2 that a subject can receive without having unacceptable side affects from the IL2. You will give yourself shots of IL2 under the skin twice a day for 5 days per week for 3 weeks. During the 3rd week of treatment there are 2 days when you have to give a higher dose of IL2 for boosting the immune cells (see below diagram). The 4th week will be a rest week where you do not receive treatment. One 4-week period of IL2 treatment is called a cycle. You will continue to receive cycles of IL2 treatment as long as your cancer shows no further growth. We will teach you how to administer the IL2 at home. ;


Study Design

Allocation: Non-Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Single Group Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Treatment


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT00283829
Study type Interventional
Source University of Washington
Contact
Status Completed
Phase Phase 1/Phase 2
Start date September 2002
Completion date July 2006

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