Tazemetostat and Mosunetuzumab in Untreated Follicular Lymphoma
Part of paid clinical trials in New York, New York.
- Sponsor
- Weill Medical College of Cornell University
- Study ID
- NCT05994235
- Phase
- PHASE2
- Status
- Active Not Recruiting
Conditions
Eligibility Criteria
- Sex
- ALL
- Age
- 18 Years - N/A
- Healthy Volunteers
- Not accepted
Interventions
- Mosunetuzumab — DRUGMosunetuzumab will be administered in weekly dose increments ("step-up dosing") during Cycle 1 and then on Day 1 of each cycle. Mosunetuzumab will be given in 28-day cycles for up to 12 cycles. Mosunetuzumab will be administered SC at the dose of 5 mg on Day 1, 45 mg on Day 8, and 45 mg on Day 15 in Cycle 1. Beginning with Cycle 2, it will be administered SC at the dose of 45 mg on Day 1. Each cycle lasts 4 weeks.
- Tazemetostat Pill — DRUGOral tazemetostat will be administered by mouth twice daily at standard dosing (800 mg twice daily) beginning at the same time as mosunetuzumab initiation until disease progression, unacceptable toxicity, or consent is withdrawn. Patients will remain on tazemetostat for up to twelve 28-day cycles from initiation of mosunetuzumab.
Study Details
The goal of this study is to learn about the safety and effectiveness of the combination of tazemetostat pills in combination with mosunetuzumab injections for people with follicular lymphoma who haven't received treatment before. The investigators hypothesize that tazemetostat with mosunetuzumab has the potential to increase the efficacy of the product without compromising the safety. Tazemetostat is a drug that inhibits EZH2, an enzyme known to drive the development of B-cell lymphomas, and inhibiting it appears to have many effects that slow down lymphoma growth and enhance the immune system's ability to fight it. Tazemetostat is FDA-approved in previously treated follicular lymphoma and currently undergoing study in other lymphomas. Mosunetuzumab is a bispecific antibody therapy that is a therapeutic strategy that uses the immune system to fight lymphoma, called immunotherapy. Bispecific antibodies have two ends: one attaches to T cells in the immune system and the other attaches to lymphoma cells, helping guide our immune system to attack the cancer. Mosunetuzumab has been studied in follicular lymphoma that has previously been treated, with positive results. Mosunetuzumab is approved by the FDA to be given intravenously (directly into a vein) but is not yet approved by the FDA is not yet approved as an injection under the skin, which is how it is given in this study. They have not yet been studied in combination.
Key Dates
- Start date
- Nov 1, 2023
- Status verified
- Mar 2026
- Primary completion
- Oct 31, 2033
- Completion
- Oct 31, 2033
Study Design
- Enrollment
- 23 participants (actual)
- Allocation
- NA
- Intervention model
- SINGLE_GROUP
- Primary purpose
- TREATMENT
Arms
- Experimental: Subcutaneous Mosunetuzumab and Oral Tazemetostat50 patients will be enrolled and treated with standard dosing of subcutaneous mosunetuzumab, and with oral tazemetostat by mouth twice daily at standard dosing (800 mg twice daily) beginning at the same time as mosunetuzumab initiation.
Primary Outcome Measure
Number of participants who achieve a complete response (CR) by completion of therapy, as determined by the Lugano Criteria [ Time Frame: Estimated day 336 ]
Locations (1)
| Facility | City | State | ZIP | Site coordinators |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Weill Cornell Medicine/NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital | New York | New York | 10065 | - |
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