Clinical Trial Details
— Status: Completed
Administrative data
NCT number |
NCT02071940 |
Other study ID # |
11_DOG12_56 |
Secondary ID |
|
Status |
Completed |
Phase |
Phase 2
|
First received |
|
Last updated |
|
Start date |
October 2015 |
Est. completion date |
March 2, 2021 |
Study information
Verified date |
August 2021 |
Source |
The Christie NHS Foundation Trust |
Contact |
n/a |
Is FDA regulated |
No |
Health authority |
|
Study type |
Interventional
|
Clinical Trial Summary
KIT (receptor tyrosine kinase) mutations occur in 15% of acral and mucosal melanomas. PIANO
is a single arm, phase II, open-label, multicentre study to evaluate the efficacy and safety
(plus molecular basis of such effects) of the KIT inhibitor PLX3397 (developed by Plexxikon)
in advanced KIT mutated acral and mucosal melanoma.
In this trial a total of 24 patients (9 in the first stage and 15 in the second stage) will
receive treatment over a 24 month recruitment period.
Following consent and successful screening, patients will receive PLX3397 capsules 1000mg/day
as monotherapy, and will remain on therapy as long as they are deriving clinical benefit.
Patients will be seen every 4 weeks during treatment to monitor response and toxicity.
Routine blood tests will be carried out at all visits and pharmacokinetics/pharmacodynamics
sampling (1 x 8 milliliter(ml) whole blood sample) will be done pre-dose on Day 1 and Day 15,
frozen and stored locally and sent to Plexxikon's vendor for central analysis at the end of
the study. Imaging will be carried out every 12 weeks to monitor response. The first 9
patients will also receive two [18F]-fluorodeoxyglucose (FDG) PET scans (baseline and at Day
15).
From specific named participating sites, 12 patients will provide additional (optional)
consent to take part in translational research. 5 of these patients will have a fresh tumour
biopsy taken at baseline, at day 15 and upon disease progression. The same 5 patients plus an
additional 7 patients (to give a total of 12 patients) will also donate blood samples at
baseline, 2 weeks, 12 weeks and on disease progression for the evaluation of circulating
tumour cells and circulating free tumour DNA.
All patients will be followed up every 6 months until death or for 12 months after the last
patient has discontinued study treatment.
Description:
The PIANO trial is an open-label, single-arm, multicentre phase II trial of PLX3397 in
advanced acral and mucosal melanoma. All eligible patients will receive PLX3397 1000mg/day as
monotherapy and will remain on treatment as long as they are deriving benefit (at the
treating Investigator's discretion).
The primary objective of this study is to assess the efficacy of PLX3397 by review of the
number of patients who are progression-free at 6 months. Additional objectives include
assessing the safety of PLX3397, overall survival and (for a sub-set of patients) biomarker
research.
A maximum of 24 eligible patients may be treated in this study. In order to recruit 24
patients, it is expected that a total of approximately 240 patients will need to be consented
and screened for the KIT mutation, as only KIT mutant patients are eligible (and this is
estimated to be 10-15% of this patient population). An interim analysis by the Independent
Data Monitoring Committee will be done after 9 patients have been recruited and if less than
2 out of the 9 patients have demonstrated progression free survival at 6 months the trial
will be terminated.
As only KIT mutant patients are eligible for inclusion, the very first step following consent
is for patients' KIT mutation status to be tested. Only patients who have KIT mutations are
eligible. Wherever possible, archival tissue samples taken at the time of diagnosis will be
requested but if a suitable sample is not available or if following testing no result is
obtained an additional fresh tumour sample would be collected via a biopsy. The tissue sample
will be sent to specialist laboratories for KIT testing and the results of this test take 1-2
weeks. If the patient is found to have a KIT mutation which is not associated with PLX3397
resistance, they will return to clinic to complete the following study parameters and
investigations upto 4 weeks prior to the start of treatment except those examinations which
are marked with an (*) ;
- Demographic details
- Medical and surgical history including discussions of current medications
- Tumour evaluation according to Response Evaluation Criteria in Solid Tumors (RECIST)
criteria v1.1 using CT or MRI scans of the thorax, abdomen and pelvis within 28 days of
scheduled start of treatment
- Vital signs and standard physical examination (to include blood pressure, pulse,
temperature, height and weight)*
- Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group (ECOG) performance status*
- Laboratory investigations: full blood count, biochemistry (Urea & Electrolytes,
creatinine, calcium, albumin, liver function tests, lactate dehydrogenase (LDH),
glucose, phosphate) and clotting screen*
- Women of childbearing potential will have a urine or serum pregnancy test( within 72
hours of study entry)
- Electrocardiograph (ECG)*
If a patient undergoes a protocol-specified screening procedure as part of standard of care
and the procedure occurs within 4 weeks then this data may be used for screening purposes and
the test would not need to be repeated.
If the screening visit confirms that the patient is still eligible to take part in the study,
they would return to clinic for a "baseline visit" and the following procedures would occur:
- Physical examination (including blood pressure and weight)
- Urine or serum pregnancy test in women of childbearing potential
- Electrocardiograph (ECG)
- ECOG Performance status
- Laboratory investigations: full blood count, biochemistry (U&Es, creatinine, calcium,
albumin, liver function tests, LDH, glucose, phosphate) and clotting screen
- 1 x 8ml whole blood sample (Pharmacodynamics/pharmacokinetics (PK/PD)analysis) to be
sent to Plexxikon's vendor for central analysis
- Adverse event (including treatment toxicity) assessments (see section 9.1 for definition
of an adverse event).
- Review of concurrent medications
- PLX3397 prescription
- PET scan (first 9 patients only)
- If the baseline visit is < 7 days since screening these investigations will not
need to be repeated.
The patient would then return to clinic at day 15, day 29 (week 4), week 8 and then every 4
weeks in year 1 and every 8 weeks thereafter (until discontinuation of PLX3397). All visits
have a window of +/- 3 days. The following procedures would be done at these visits:
- Physical examination (including blood pressure and weight).
- Electrocardiograph (ECG)
- ECOG Performance Status (PS)
- Laboratory investigations: full blood count, biochemistry (U&Es, creatinine, calcium,
albumin, liver function tests, LDH, glucose, phosphate) and clotting screen.
- 1 x 8ml whole blood sample (PK/PD analysis) at Day 15 only (sent to Plexxikon's vendor
for central analysis)
- Adverse event (including treatment toxicity) assessments until 30 days after
discontinuation of PLX3397.
- Review of concurrent medications.
- Assessment of compliance with study medication.
- CT or MRI scans of the thorax, abdomen and pelvis at week 12, week 26 and every 12 weeks
thereafter.
- Urine or serum pregnancy testing in women of childbearing potential on every visit (
except day 15 on treatment).
- PET scan after 2 weeks of therapy (day 15 ±3 days) - first 9 patients only
When the patient has discontinued the PLX3397 they then enter the follow-up phase of the
study. Patients will be followed up until death or for 12 months after the last patient has
discontinued study treatment. Patients can be followed up by telephone call every 6 months to
assess current status and subsequent therapies. Alternatively follow-up can be in clinic
especially in the case of complaints which may indicate late toxicity.
Translational Research
A subset of patients from named sites (The Christie National Health Service (NHS) Foundation
Trust and The Royal Marsden NHS Foundation Trust) will also be asked to provide additional,
optional consent to take part in translational research. 5 patients will have biopsies taken
at 3 timepoints (baseline, at day 15 and on disease progression) and blood samples taken at 4
timepoints (baseline, at day 15, week 12 and on disease progression). In addition, a further
7 patients will give blood samples only (to give a total of 12 patients giving blood
samples). Wherever possible translational blood samples will be taken at the same time as the
standard trial blood samples which confirm that the patient is still eligible for study
inclusion.