Glioblastoma Clinical Trial
— ERaDICATeOfficial title:
Evaluation of Recovery From Drug-Induced Lymphopenia Using Cytomegalovirus-specific T-cell Adoptive Transfer
Verified date | January 2018 |
Source | Duke University |
Contact | n/a |
Is FDA regulated | No |
Health authority | |
Study type | Interventional |
The purpose of this research study is to learn if your own immune cells can be activated and
multiplied in order to help your body fight off the tumor cells in your brain. The safety of
this procedure will also be studied. This procedure, called CMV-autologous lymphocyte
transfer or CMV-ALT is investigational which means that it is not approved by the US Food and
Drug Administration (FDA) and is still being tested in research studies. Autologous
lymphocyte transfer or ALT means that you will receive your own immune cells back (and not
from another donor) as a treatment after they have been activated and grown to large numbers
in a clinical lab.
It is believed that the body's immune (protection) system can attack tumor cells and kill
them. Immune cells called T-lymphocytes (T-cells) can recognize special proteins on the
surface of tumors as a signal to attack and fight the cancer. In most patients with advanced
cancer, the immune system does not adequately destroy the tumor because the white blood cells
or T-cells are not stimulated enough.
Before your T-cells can become active against tumor cells, they require strong stimulation.
There are special "stimulator" cells in the body called Dendritic Cells (DCs) that can take
up proteins released from cancer cells and present pieces of these proteins to T lymphocytes
to create this strong stimulation. Dendritic cells taken from your blood will be "pulsed" or
loaded with genetic material called RNA (ribonucleic acid), which stimulates the DC to change
the RNA into a protein called pp65. This protein is produced by a common virus called
Cytomegalovirus (CMV) that 70-80% of us have been exposed to in our lifetime. Recently, we
have found that this virus is present in many malignant brain tumors. Brain tumors are very
aggressive and, for reasons we do not yet understand, are difficult for the body to attack.
The CMV virus is a target in the tumor that, if attacked by your immune systems cells, may
prevent your tumor from growing. We have found that we can grow immune cells to very large
numbers from the blood of people who have evidence of prior exposure to this virus. You will
therefore be tested to determine if you have pre-existing antibodies to this virus in order
to participate in this study.
We will use your DCs to activate and grow immune cells from your blood to large numbers in a
clinical laboratory. These CMV-specific immune cells, called CMV-ALT, will be returned to
your body when they have become activated. It is hoped that these cells will seek out and
kill tumor cells that express the CMV viral protein and not attack normal cells. The transfer
of immune cells that stimulates your immune system is called adoptive immunotherapy. We will
evaluate two doses of immune cells in this study (Dose 1 and Dose 2). Depending on when you
are enrolled in this study you will receive either Dose 1 or 2. The first six patients
enrolled on this study will receive Dose 1 (the lower dose) and the next six patients will
receive Dose 2 (the higher dose). We do not know at this time if either dose is more
effective or safer to administer which is why we are testing both doses. Dose 2 will be a
larger number of immune cells if the treatment is found to be safe in the first six patients
treated during this study.
In this study we will also see, in some randomly selected patients, if giving an injection of
the DC pulsed with pp65 RNA into the skin improves the function of the CMV-ALT treatment or
not. You will receive three injections under the skin of either some of the same DC that were
used to stimulate your immune cells in the clinical laboratory or three injections of saline
(salt solution) under the skin starting with the infusion of the CMV-ALT. It is unknown if a
DC injection will be beneficial to the immune cells or not so the responses will be compared
in patients who receive DC versus saline injection with their CMV-ALT. After these three
injections, blood will be collected to compare the responses between patients that received
saline to those that received DC injections.
Status | Completed |
Enrollment | 23 |
Est. completion date | April 2015 |
Est. primary completion date | December 2013 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | No |
Gender | All |
Age group | 18 Years and older |
Eligibility |
Inclusion Criteria: - Age >18 years of age. - GBM (WHO Grade IV) with definitive resection <4 weeks prior to leukapheresis with residual radiographic contrast enhancement on post-resection CT or MRI of <1 cm in maximal diameter in any axial plane. - Karnofsky Performance Status (KPS ) of > 80% and a Curran Group status of I-IV. Exclusion Criteria: - Radiographic or cytologic evidence of leptomeningeal or multicentric disease at any time prior to vaccination. - Prior conventional anti-tumor therapy other than steroids, RT, or TMZ. - Pregnant or need to breast feed during the study period (Negative b-HCG test required). - Requirement for continuous corticosteroids above physiologic levels at time of first vaccination. - Active infection requiring treatment or an unexplained febrile (> 101.5o F) illness. - Known immunosuppressive disease or human immunodeficiency virus infection. - Patients with unstable or severe intercurrent medical conditions such as severe heart or lung disease. - Allergic or unable to tolerate TMZ for reasons other than lymphopenia. - Patients with previous inguinal lymph node dissection. |
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
United States | Duke University Medical Center | Durham | North Carolina |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
John Sampson |
United States,
Reap EA, Suryadevara CM, Batich KA, Sanchez-Perez L, Archer GE, Schmittling RJ, Norberg PK, Herndon JE 2nd, Healy P, Congdon KL, Gedeon PC, Campbell OC, Swartz AM, Riccione KA, Yi JS, Hossain-Ibrahim MK, Saraswathula A, Nair SK, Dunn-Pirio AM, Broome TM, Weinhold KJ, Desjardins A, Vlahovic G, McLendon RE, Friedman AH, Friedman HS, Bigner DD, Fecci PE, Mitchell DA, Sampson JH. Dendritic Cells Enhance Polyfunctionality of Adoptively Transferred T Cells That Target Cytomegalovirus in Glioblastoma. Cancer Res. 2018 Jan 1;78(1):256-264. doi: 10.1158/0008-5472.CAN-17-0469. Epub 2017 Nov 1. — View Citation
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Primary | To evaluate if vaccinating adult patients with newly-diagnosed GBMs using CMV-DCs during recovery from therapeutic TMZ-induced lymphopenia with ALT in patients that are seropositive for CMV enhances the T-cell response. | 4 months after enrollment | ||
Secondary | To evaluate the safety of ALT with CMV pp65-activated T-cells in adult patients with newly-diagnosed GBMs during recovery from therapeutic TMZ-induced lymphopenia. | 4 months from time of enrollment |
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