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Clinical Trial Summary

To determine the maximum tolerated dose and dose limiting toxicity of thymoglobulin in multiple myeloma patients.

To determine the overall response rate (CR+PR) of patients with relapsed or refractory multiple myeloma treated with Thymoglobulin.

To determine the time to response, duration of response, and time to progression and overall survival of patients treated with Thymoglobulin.

To determine the safety and tolerability of Thymoglobulin in these patients.

To assess the changes in lymphocyte apoptosis and apoptotic signaling in treated patients.


Clinical Trial Description

Increasingly, upregulation of antiapoptotic proteins have been implicated in the pathogenesis and in the development of chemotherapy resistance in multiple myeloma. Therapeutic interventions that target the apoptotic pathway in myeloma are attractive targets to treat resistant disease. Dexamethasone triggers apoptosis via the release of Smac (second mitochondria-derived activator of caspase) leading to the activation of caspase-9 and caspase-3.37 The proteasome inhibitor bortezomib blocks signal transduction pathways mediated by NF-κB including the regulation of antiapoptotic genes such as TRAF1 and 2 (TNF receptor-associated factors) and cIAP (cellular inhibitor of apoptosis) and BCLXL.

Two independent investigators have established the activity of thymoglobulin in multiple myeloma cells from cell lines and patients.38,39 Thymoglobulin has been shown to induce apoptosis via distinct mechanisms in multiple myeloma cells.40 This action appears to be mediated by interactions with surface markers including CD80, CD38, CD40 and CD45. This appears to stimulate apoptosis via cathepsin and caspase pathways.39 By targeting different aspects of the apoptotic process, Thymoglobulin may provide a mechanism to overcome drug resistance in multiple myeloma.

Normal bone marrow B-cells, activated B cells and plasma cells have been shown to undergo apoptosis in a concentration dependent manner with rATG. The rATG has been shown to bind to B cells and this binding competitively inhibits several B cell specific monoclonal antibodies. The apoptosis can be inhibited by specific pathway inhibitors to caspases, cathepsin B and lysosomal cysteine proteases, indicating that each of these pathways is stimulated by thymoglobulin exposure. 18

Thymoglobulin at high concentrations binds complement resulting in direct cell lysis of lymphocytes.22 Anti-thymocyte globulins induce B cell apoptosis and do so preferentially to myelomonocytic and T-cell lines.41,42 Both myeloma cell lines and primary myeloma cells from patient bone marrow aspirates undergo apoptosis after exposure to thymoglobulin, as might be expected based on the apoptotic affect on B-cell lineages.38 Additionally both sets of cells undergo opsonization when complement is added in vitro. This demonstrates that thymoglobulin can induce myeloma cell kill by a number of methods and thus would be less susceptible to tumor resistance. The thymoglobulin binding sites have been assessed by competitive binding with monoclonal antibodies. Thymoglobulin binds competitively and specifically to IgG, HLA-ABC, HLA-DR, CD16, CD32, CD64, CD19, CD20, CD27, CD30, CD38, CD40, CD52, CD80, CD95, CD126, and CD138. Only IgG, CD16, CD64, and CD80 are not competitively bound. The apoptosis in primary cells can be inhibited by blocking the caspase, cathepsin D, or cathepsin B & D pathways. Zand et al also compared apoptotic response for five different lots of thymoglobulin. All lots apoptotic curves were overlapping over the range of 1-120 mcg/ml, demonstrating that very little lot to lot variation exists.43 This would be expected since each lot is derived from the combined sera of multiple immunized rabbits and thus individual differences in response for each rabbit would be mitigated. This may not be the case with lots of ATGAM each derived from a single horse. Each lot of thymoglobulin is already depleted of antibodies to red blood cells, has viruses inactivated and is tested for lymphocytotoxicity prior to release. The consistency demonstrated by Zand et al is consistent with the lack of observed variation in potency noticed in the greater than 20 years of clinical experience with this medication.

Together, these data provide a rational for the clinical use of Thymoglobulin in multiple myeloma. As a result, we propose a dose escalation, phase I, open-label study of Thymoglobulin in patients with relapsed or refractory multiple myeloma. ;


Study Design

Allocation: Non-Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Safety/Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Treatment


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT00545519
Study type Interventional
Source Washington University School of Medicine
Contact
Status Completed
Phase Phase 1
Start date October 2006
Completion date March 2008

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