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Treatment of Relapsed or Chemotherapy Refractory Chronic Lymphocytic Leukemia or Indolent B Cell Lymphoma Using Autologous T Cells Genetically Targeted to the B Cell Specific Antigen CD19

Phase 1
Active, not recruiting
Conditions
Leukemia
Interventions
Biological: therapeutic autologous lymphocytes
Drug: cyclophosphamide
Registration Number
NCT00466531
Lead Sponsor
Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center
Brief Summary

RATIONALE: Using T cells from the patient that have been treated in the laboratory may help the body build an effective immune response to kill cancer cells. Drugs used in chemotherapy, such as cyclophosphamide, work in different ways to stop the growth of cancer cells, either by killing the cells or by stopping them from dividing. Giving laboratory-treated T cells together with cyclophosphamide may kill more cancer cells.

PURPOSE: This is a two-stage protocol, consisting of a single-institution phase I safety study and multi-institution phase IIa extension study.

Detailed Description

OBJECTIVES:

Phase 1: The primary objective is to assess the safety of autologous T cells genetically modified to express chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) targeting CD19 antigen (19-28z) with or without conditioning chemotherapy.

• Phase IIa: The primary objective is to compare the relative engraftment and persistence of the two CAR modified CD19-targeted T cells expressing different co-stimulatory signaling domain CD28 (19-28z) and 4-1BB (CART-19:CD3z-4-1BB) in the CAR construct.

To compare the in vivo survival of genetically modified 19-28z CAR+ T cells after T cell infusion alone or in combination with conditioning chemotherapy.

* To compare the gene transfer/expression efficiency of the two viral vectors (retrovirus vs. lentivirus).

* To assess the anti-leukemic activity of adoptively transferred CD19-targeted modified T cells linked to the CD28 (19-28z) and 4-1BB signaling domains (CART-19:CD3z-4-1BB).

OUTLINE:

The first stage is a standard 3-step phase I dose escalation trial to assess the safety of 19-28z CAR expressing autologous T cells with or without prior conditioning chemotherapy. In Step 1, a cohort of patients will receive the lowest planned dose of 19-28z+ modified T cells. In Step 2, a cohort of patients will receive cyclophosphamide conditioning chemotherapy followed by the lowest planned dose of 19-28z+ modified T cells. If less than 33% of patients in the cohort (Step 2) experience unanticipated dose-limiting toxicity. In Step 3, a cohort of patients will be treated with the investigator's choice conditioning chemotherapy followed by the higher dose of 19-28z+ modified T cells. If less than 33% of patients in the initial cohort (Step 3) experience unanticipated dose-limiting toxicity, the cohort in Step 3 may be be expanded to include up to 15 patients. In Step 3, an additional cohort of Waldenstrom's Macroglobulinemia (WM) patients will be treated with the investigator's choice conditioning chemotherapy followed by 19-28z+ T cells. However, to maximize safety for WM patients, they will be treated at the lower dose of modified T cells (1x106 19-28z+ T cells/kg). If no toxicity is observed in the initial cohort, the dose may be increased in a standard 3-step dose-escalation scheme as described above.

In the Phase IIa extension part of the trial, 12 patients from MSKCC will be enrolled, and will be treated with co-infusion of 19-28z and CART-19:CD3z-4-1BB+ modified T cells mixed at 1:1 ratio at the MTD of T cells determined from the phase I trial.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
ACTIVE_NOT_RECRUITING
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
50
Inclusion Criteria

Not provided

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Exclusion Criteria

Not provided

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Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
SINGLE_GROUP
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
Patients with CLL or indolent B-cell lymphomatherapeutic autologous lymphocytesThe first stage is a standard 3-step phase I dose escalation trial to assess the safety of 19-28z CAR expressing autologous T cells with or without prior conditioning chemotherapy.Step 1, a cohort of pts will receive the lowest planned dose of 19-28z+ modified T cells. Step 2, a cohort of pts will receive cyclophosphamide conditioning chemotherapy followed by the lowest planned dose of 19-28z+ modified T cells. If less than 33% of pts in the cohort experience unanticipated dose-limiting toxicity,Step 3, a cohort of pts will be treated with the investigator's choice conditioning chemotherapy followed by the higher dose of 19-28z+ modified T cells. If less than 33% of pts in the initial cohort (Step 3) experience unanticipated dose-limiting toxicity, the cohort in Step 3 may be expanded to include up to 15 pts. In Step 3, an additional cohort of Waldenstrom's Macroglobulinemia (WM) pts will be treated with the investigator's choice conditioning chemotherapy followed by 19-28z+ T cells.
Patients with CLL or indolent B-cell lymphomacyclophosphamideThe first stage is a standard 3-step phase I dose escalation trial to assess the safety of 19-28z CAR expressing autologous T cells with or without prior conditioning chemotherapy.Step 1, a cohort of pts will receive the lowest planned dose of 19-28z+ modified T cells. Step 2, a cohort of pts will receive cyclophosphamide conditioning chemotherapy followed by the lowest planned dose of 19-28z+ modified T cells. If less than 33% of pts in the cohort experience unanticipated dose-limiting toxicity,Step 3, a cohort of pts will be treated with the investigator's choice conditioning chemotherapy followed by the higher dose of 19-28z+ modified T cells. If less than 33% of pts in the initial cohort (Step 3) experience unanticipated dose-limiting toxicity, the cohort in Step 3 may be expanded to include up to 15 pts. In Step 3, an additional cohort of Waldenstrom's Macroglobulinemia (WM) pts will be treated with the investigator's choice conditioning chemotherapy followed by 19-28z+ T cells.
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Safety (phase I)1 year
efficacy of the two CD19-targeted T cell methods (phase II)1 year
Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Antileukemic effect1 year
Comparison of in vivo survival of patients receiving genetically modified anti-CD19 T cells after T-cell infusion with vs without lymphodepleting therapy1 year

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center

🇺🇸

New York, New York, United States

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