Peripheral Nerve Tumors Clinical Trial
Official title:
A Phase 2 Study of CPI-0610, a Small Molecule Inhibitor of Bromodomain and Extra-Terminal (BET) Proteins, in Patients With Malignant Peripheral Nerve Sheath Tumors
Establish safety and toxicity profile and preliminary response rate of CPI-0610 in MPNST patients and correlate response with pharmacodynamics markers and BET inhibition.
- Optional tumor biopsy will be obtained prior to Day 1 of CPI-0610 administration.
- CPI-0610 will be administered 200mg orally once a daily for 14 consecutive days followed
by a 7-day break. The 14 days of CPI-0610 dosing and the 7-day break together constitute
1 cycle of treatment. The dose will not be adjusted for body weight or body surface
area.
- Patients should be instructed to take their daily dose at approximately the same time of
day. Each dose should be taken with a glass of water and consumed over as short a time
as possible—e.g., within 5 minutes. Patients should be instructed to swallow the tablet
whole and to not chew or cut them.
- Doses may be taken either with or without food.
- If vomiting occurs during the course of treatment, then no re-dosing of the patient is
allowed before the next scheduled dose.
- If the patient forgets to take his/her daily morning dose, then he/she should take
CPI-0610 within 6 hours after the missed dose. If more than 6 hours have passed, then
that day's dose should be omitted, and the patient should resume treatment with the next
scheduled dose.
- Repeat optional tumor biopsy will be obtained on day 8 of CPI-0610 treatment.
Toxicities and Dosing Delays/Dose Modifications During a cycle of treatment, CPI-0610 should
continue to be administered as planned unless CTCAE grade 3-4 toxicities occur. In the case
of CPI-0610-related neutropenia and/or thrombocytopenia, dosing as planned should continue as
long as the ANC remains >0.5x109/L and the platelet count remains >25x109/L. Should either
the ANC or platelet count fall below these values—become CTCAE grade 4—dosing with CPI-0610
should be interrupted. CPI-0610 dosing within the planned 14 days of treatment should not be
resumed until the ANC is >0.75x109/L and the platelet count is >50x109/L. In addition, dosing
within the cycle of treatment should not be resumed if the interruption has resulted in the
omission of more than 2 of the planned 14 days of dosing. If it is possible to resume dosing
within the planned 14 days of treatment, no attempt should be made to make up the missed
doses of CPI-0610. If more than 2 of the planned 14 days of therapy have been omitted, then
treatment should be resumed only with a new cycle of treatment, if the ANC>1x109/L and the
platelet count >75x109/L. In addition, all other toxicities considered to be related to
CPI-0610 must have resolved to CTCAE grade 1 or baseline. If the patient fails to meet the
above-cited criteria for retreatment, then initiation of the next cycle of treatment should
be delayed by one week. Following the additional week of no treatment, the next cycle may
begin if the patient's ANC is>1x109/L and the platelet count is >75x109/L. In addition, all
other toxicities considered to be related to CPI-0610 must have resolved to CTCAE grade 1 or
baseline. If there are more than 28 days between the start of one cycle and the start of the
next, the patient will no longer receive CPI-0610 therapy unless the patient's MPNST is
stable or responding to therapy. Then consideration may be given to resuming treatment at a
lower dose level to be discussed with Sponsor and Institutional Review Board (IRB). When a
reduction in dose of CPI-0610 is required, no re-escalation of dose will be permitted.
Exceptions to the toxicity delay are CTCAE elevations in alkaline phosphatase and uric acid
and <72 hours of grade 3 fatigue. When laboratory abnormalities form the basis of treatment
decisions, they should be confirmed by repeated testing with a new blood sample or procedure.
Optimal therapy for vomiting or diarrhea is based on physician preference with consideration
of the prohibited medications listed in the appendix. G-CSF may be used to treat patients who
have developed dose-limiting neutropenia, as per institutional guidelines, following
discontinuation of CPI-0610 treatment. However, G-CSF may not be used during CPI-0610
administration or during the treatment break. Patients should not have dose reductions of
CPI-0610 unless a grade 3-4 toxicity occurs and retreatment is not possible within the 28 day
period. Then the patient is withdrawn from study unless the patient's MPNST has responded or
stable on therapy. Then consideration may be given to resuming treatment at a lower dose
level to be discussed with Sponsor and IRB. When a reduction in the dose of CPI-0610 is
required, no re-escalation of dose will be permitted. Patients whose treatment is interrupted
or permanently discontinued because of toxicities must be followed until the toxicity
resolves or stabilizes.
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