Clinical Trial Details
— Status: Completed
Administrative data
NCT number |
NCT03668847 |
Other study ID # |
DTI-026 |
Secondary ID |
|
Status |
Completed |
Phase |
Phase 2
|
First received |
|
Last updated |
|
Start date |
January 1, 2019 |
Est. completion date |
September 30, 2021 |
Study information
Verified date |
November 2022 |
Source |
DEKK-TEC, Inc. |
Contact |
n/a |
Is FDA regulated |
No |
Health authority |
|
Study type |
Interventional
|
Clinical Trial Summary
4-Demethyl-4-cholesteryloxycarbonylpenclomedine (DM-CHOC-PEN) is a polychlorinated pyridyl
cholesterol carbonate that is lipophilic, electrically neural, crosses the blood brain
barrier (BBB), ability to localize in intracranial tumor tissue, lacks neurotoxicity and not
transported out of the brain via Pgp (p-glycoprotein). DM-CHOC-PEN has completed a Phase I
Adolescent and Young Adult (AYA) trial in humans, some of which possessed primary and
secondary tumors involving the brain. Complete remissions in both primary (astrocytoma, GBM)
and metastatic lung cancers were reported.
This Phase II trial is closed for adolescent and young adults (AYA) subjects with advanced
cancer - brain involvement is required.
Description:
The primary goal of this Phase II AYA oncology clinical trial was to evaluate the safety and
efficacy of 4-demethyl-4-cholesteryloxycarbonylpenclomedine (DM-CHOC-PEN), as anticancer
therapy in AYA individuals with advanced cancer involving the central or spinal nervous
system (CNS & SNS).
DM-CHOC-PEN is a polychlorinated pyridine cholesteryloxycarbonate that crosses the blood
brain barrier (BBB), accumulates in CNS tumor tissue in humans and has produced objective
responses, with acceptable/reversible hepatic toxicities (in patients with prior liver
disease) and no evidence of hematological, renal, neuro-toxicities with improved quality of
life and overall survival in adolescent, young adult and adult Phase I/II clinical trials -
IND - 68,876.
The FDA has supported the Phase II clinical trial designed to identify safety and efficacy in
AYA cancers subjects and the trial has been completed with acceptable toxicity and MTDs
identified.
Almost 700,000 people in the US are living with tumors involving the CNS or spinal nervous
system (SNS) tumors. Nearly 15% of these tumors involve the adolescent/young adult (AYA)
population, aged 15-39 years of age. It is predicted that 10,617 AYA individuals will be
diagnosed with brain or CNS tumors resulting in 434 deaths this year in the US. Trends in CNS
tumors have sharply increased since 1989 for AYA individuals with a history of cancer, who
appeared to have 'beaten the odds', only to have a re-occurrence from cancer involving the
CNS after years of remission; the most common types of cancer in AYA individuals are -
melanoma, leukemia and sarcomas. This group of individuals deserves special attention.
For males and female individuals <20 years of age, primary brain and secondary cancers of the
CNS and spinal nervous system (SNS) are the most common causes of death from cancer and in
the 20-39 year age group the first cause of cancer-related deaths in males and the fifth
cause of cancer-related deaths in females. The incidence and histology of cancer types does
vary according to subject age.
A critical component in designing an agent that will cross the protective blood brain barrier
(BBB) is that the agent must be readily transported intracerebrally, does not produce local
irritation/neurotoxicity and is not recycled back into the general circulation. After IV
administration DM-CHOC-PEN readily penetrates the BBB, is not a substrate for the transporter
protein P-glycoprotein (P-gp) and has shown anticancer activity in CNS tumors. The effective
transport of DM-CHOC-PEN into CNS tumors in adults without neurotic behavioral alterations
and associated events supports the drug's use in children with CNS tumors at an age in which
brain development and maturation is still very active with cognitive lability. The observed
responses noted in adults with metastatic cancers involving the CNS and cerebellum treated
with DM-CHOC-PEN may also occur in medulloblastoma in AYA. Thus, the drug's unique properties
and lack of toxicities noted in the adult studies merits the Phase I trial proposed here in
children.
The specific objectives of this Phase I study were to:
1. Conduct a Phase II clinical trial with DM-CHOC-PEN in AYA individuals that have advanced
cancers with central or spinal nervous systems involvements and monitor safety and
document anticancer activity for the drug. All data was between investigators
communicated through an e-RAP program. This was accomplished through IND - 68.876.
2. Verify the pharmacokinetic/dynamic profiles of DM-CHOC-PEN and metabolites in AYA
subjects with advanced cancers involving the central nervous system.
3. Analyze data and prepare an Orphan Drug Designated package for FDA submission for AYA
subjects with CNS involvement from cancer for review.