- ICH GCP
- US Clinical Trials Registry
- Clinical Trial NCT02889445
A Phase I Trial of DM-CHOC-PEN in Adolescent and Young Adult (AYA) Subjects With Advanced Cancers
A Phase I Trial to Evaluate Safety and Tolerance of Intravenous 4-Demethyl-4-cholesteryloxycarbonylpenclomedine (DM-CHOC-PEN) in Adolescent and Young Adults (AYA) Subjects With Cancers
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) (1). DM-CHOC-PEN has completed Phase I/II trials in humans with primary and secondary tumors involving the brain with success. Complete remissions in both primary (astrocytomas, GBM) and metastatic lung cancers.
This trial is open for adolescent and young adults (AYA) subjects with advanced cancer - brain involvement is not required.
Study Overview
Status
Conditions
Intervention / Treatment
Detailed Description
The primary goal of this Phase I pediatric oncology clinical trial will be to evaluate the safety and use of 4-demethyl-4-cholesteryloxycarbonylpenclomedine (DM-CHOC-PEN), as anticancer therapy for AYA with advanced cancer +/- central nervous system (CNS) involvement.
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 adult Phase I/II clinical trials - IND - 68,876 (1-6).
The FDA supports the proposed Phase I clinical trial designed to identify safety, toxicities and an acceptable MTD in AYA cancers subjects now that the adult Phase I trial has been completed with acceptable toxicity and MTDs identified (2, 3, 5, 6).
Almost 700,000 people in the US are living with tumors involving the CNS or spinal nervous system (SNS) tumors (6). Nearly 15% of these tumors involve the adolescent/young adult (AYA) population, aged 15-39 years of age (6). 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 (6). 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 reoccurrence from cancer involving the CNS after years of remission; the most common types of cancer in AYA individuals are - melanoma, leukemia and sarcomas (7). This group of individuals deserve special care.
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 (4). The effective transport of DM-CHOC-PEN into CNS tumors in adults without neurotoxic 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 (Table 1) may also occur in medulloblastoma in AYA (7, 9). 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 will be to:
- Conduct a Phase I clinical trial with DM-CHOC-PEN in AYA that have advanced cancers with +/- the central nervous system to document toxicities, define an acceptable maximum tolerated dose (MTD), and identify anticancer activity for the drug. All data will be communicated through an e-RAP program. This will be accomplished through IND - 68.876.
- Studying the pharmacokinetic/dynamic profiles of DM-CHOC-PEN and metabolites in AYAs with advanced cancers involving the central nervous system.
- Analyze data and prepare a Phase II clinical trial in AYA subjects for FDA review.
Study Type
Contacts and Locations
Study Locations
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Michigan
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Detroit, Michigan, United States, 48336
- Detroit Clinical Research Centers
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Participation Criteria
Eligibility Criteria
Ages Eligible for Study
Accepts Healthy Volunteers
Genders Eligible for Study
Description
Inclusion Criteria:Inclusion Criteria will be as follows -
- Subjects must have histological proof of a malignancy, which has been treated with standard treatments, which may include radiation, and measurable lesions are not required but must have evidence that the disease is advanced.
- Subjects must have life expectancy of at least 12 weeks and a Karnofsky performance score: > 60 % (or a Zubrod performance status of < 2).
- The age limit - a limit of 39 years of age. Gender is not a criterion.
- All subjects must be off previous chemo- and/or radiotherapy for at least three (3) weeks prior to entrance into the study and have recovered from any toxic effects induced by such treatment(s); no nitrosourea type drug or ipilumimab treatments are permitted within the last six (6) weeks prior to enrollment. No major surgery within 14 days of enrollment. Subjects may continue to receive anti- estrogen/steroid therapy that has been initiated at least eight weeks prior to enrollment in the study.
- Subjects should have adequate bone marrow function defined as a peripheral WBC >3,000/mm3 with an ANC >1500/mm3 and a platelet count >100,000/mm3.
- Subjects should have hepatic function (alkaline phosphatase, AST and ALT) < ULN and renal functions with serum creatinine - <1.5 x UNL. If a patient has liver metastasis and/or a history of liver disease - they will receive a lower dose of the drug per treatment protocol.
- Subjects should not be allergic to eggs or soy beans.
- Subjects must be medically, psychologically and neurologically stable and have triplicate baseline ECG's with a mean QTc interval <500 ms and >300 ms and neither a history of congenital prolonged or short QT syndrome. Subjects with a history of cardiac disease must be stable.
- Subjects and/or legal guardian must understand the nature of the study and be willing to sign an informed consent that complies with the investigator/DEKK-TEC policies and approved by the Human Investigation Review Committee.
Exclusion Criteria: Exclusion criteria will be as follows:
- Subjects with concurrent severe and/or uncontrolled medical co-morbidities - including active infections, unstable uncontrolled diabetes, cardiovascular and pulmonary, renal, psychiatric or social conditions that could compromise the safety or compliance of treatment are not eligible.
- Concomitant chemotherapy or radiotherapy is not permitted.
- Pregnant or lactating females are excluded. Women of childbearing age, and their sexual partners, must use an effective contraception program. Males who are having sexual relations with women capable of child bearing must use the barrier birth control while on the study and for 3-months after the last dose of the study drug.
- Subjects taking CYP3A4 inducers or inhibitors are not eligible since it is not known whether the study drug is metabolized through this pathway. The following CYP3A4 inhibitors/inducers are not permitted during the trial - phenobarbital, fluconazole, erythromycin, verapamil; the latter 3-drugs are moderate CYP3A4 inhibitors.
- Subjects taking the following medications may experience QT/QTc interval prolongation and are not eligible for the trial - most anti-arrhythmia drugs (incl. amiodarone), erythromycin, quinolone antibiotics, ketoconazole, Zithromax, and phenothiazine and will be denied enrollment in the study. The possible interactions of these drugs and DM-CHOC-PEN have not been established. Subjects receiving these drugs will only be eligible if they discontinue the drugs and have an acceptable ECG.
- Coagulopathies - patients requiring full dose anticoagulation with warfarin are excluded. However, patients stable and on other anticoagulants can be included.
Study Plan
How is the study designed?
Collaborators and Investigators
Sponsor
Study record dates
Study Registration Dates
First Submitted
First Submitted That Met QC Criteria
First Posted (ESTIMATE)
Study Record Updates
Last Update Posted (ACTUAL)
Last Update Submitted That Met QC Criteria
Last Verified
More Information
Terms related to this study
Additional Relevant MeSH Terms
Other Study ID Numbers
- DTI-024
This information was retrieved directly from the website clinicaltrials.gov without any changes. If you have any requests to change, remove or update your study details, please contact register@clinicaltrials.gov. As soon as a change is implemented on clinicaltrials.gov, this will be updated automatically on our website as well.
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