Gene-Modified T Cells, Vaccine Therapy, and Nivolumab in Treating Patients With Stage IV or Locally Advanced Solid Tumors Expressing NY-ESO-1
Part of paid clinical trials in Los Angeles, California.
- Sponsor
- Jonsson Comprehensive Cancer Center
- Study ID
- NCT02775292
- Phase
- PHASE1
- Status
- Completed
Conditions
- Adult Solid Neoplasm
- Childhood Solid Neoplasm
- Metastatic Neoplasm
Eligibility Criteria
- Sex
- ALL
- Age
- 16 Years - N/A
- Healthy Volunteers
- Not accepted
Interventions
- Aldesleukin — BIOLOGICALGiven SC
- Cyclophosphamide — DRUGGiven IV
- Fludarabine Phosphate — DRUGGiven IV
- Laboratory Biomarker Analysis — OTHERCorrelative studies
- Nivolumab — BIOLOGICALGiven IV
- NY-ESO-1 Reactive TCR Retroviral Vector Transduced Autologous PBL — BIOLOGICALGiven IV
- NY-ESO-1(157-165) Peptide-pulsed Autologous Dendritic Cell Vaccine — BIOLOGICALGiven ID
- Positron Emission Tomography — PROCEDURECorrelative studies
Study Details
This phase I trial studies the side effects and the best dose of nivolumab when given together with gene-modified T cells and vaccine therapy in treating patients with solid tumors that express the cancer-testes antigen NY-ESO-1 gene AND have spread from where it started to nearby tissue or lymph nodes (locally advanced) or distant organs (stage IV). T cells are a special type of white blood cells (immune cell) that have the ability to kill cancer cells. Nivolumab may block PD-1 which is found on T cells and help the immune system kill cancer cells. Placing a modified gene for the NY-ESO-1 T cell receptor (TCR) into the patients' T cells in the laboratory and then giving them back to the patient may help the body build an immune response to kill tumor cells that express NY-ESO-1. Dendritic cells are another type of blood cell that can teach other cells in the body to look for cancer cells and attack them. Giving a dendritic cell vaccine with the NY-ESO-1 protein may help dendritic cells teach the immune system to target cancer cells expressing that protein, and further help the T cells attack cancer. Giving nivolumab together with gene-modified T-cells and dendritic cell vaccine may teach the immune system to recognize and kill cancer cells that express NY-ESO-1.
Key Dates
- Start date
- Jan 3, 2017
- Status verified
- Aug 2019
- Primary completion
- Apr 8, 2019
- Completion
- Apr 8, 2019
Study Design
- Enrollment
- 1 participants (actual)
- Allocation
- NA
- Intervention model
- SINGLE_GROUP
- Primary purpose
- TREATMENT
Arms
- Experimental: Treatment (NY-ESO-1 TCR transduced PBMC, vaccine, nivolumab)CONDITIONING REGIMEN: Patients receive cyclophosphamide IV over 1 hour on days -5 to -4 and fludarabine phosphate IV over 30 minutes on days -4 to -1. NY-ESO-1 TCR PBMC INFUSION: Patients receive NY-ESO-1 TCR PBMC IV on day 0. NIVOLUMAB: Patients receive nivolumab IV over 60 minutes on day 0 or 1. Treatment repeats every 2 weeks for up to 2 years in the absence of disease progression or unacceptable toxicity. NY-ESO-1(157-165) PEPTIDE PULSED DC: Patients receive NY-ESO-1(157-165) peptide pulsed DC ID on days 1, 14, and 28. LOW DOSE ALDESLEUKIN ADMINISTRATION: Patients receive aldesleukin SC BID for 7 days beginning on day 1 for a maximum of 14 doses.
Primary Outcome Measure
Incidence of adverse events, defined following the National Cancer Institute Common Terminology Criteria for Adverse Events version 4.0 [ Time Frame: Up to 15 years ]
Locations (1)
| Facility | City | State | ZIP | Site coordinators |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| UCLA / Jonsson Comprehensive Cancer Center | Los Angeles | California | 90095 | - |
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