Trials / Suspended
SuspendedNCT01723306
Phase II/Pilot Study of 2nd Generation Anti-CEA Designer T Cells in Adenocarcinomas
"Phase II/Pilot Study of 2nd Generation Anti-CEA Esigner T Cells in Adenocarcinomas"
- Status
- Suspended
- Phase
- Phase 2
- Study type
- Interventional
- Enrollment
- 48 (estimated)
- Sponsor
- Roger Williams Medical Center · Academic / Other
- Sex
- All
- Age
- 18 Years – 80 Years
- Healthy volunteers
- Not accepted
Summary
T cells can penetrate virtually every biologic space and have the power to dispose of normal or malignant cells as seen in viral and autoimmune diseases and in the rare spontaneous remis-sions of cancer. However, T cells are easily tolerized to self or tumor antigens and "immune surveillance" has manifestly failed in every cancer that is clinically apparent. It is the goal of these studies to supply the specificities and affinities to patient T cells without regard for their "endogenous" T cell receptor repertoire, directed by antibody-defined recognition to kill malignant cells based on their expression of antigen. We will achieve this by preparing chimeric IgCD28TCR genes in mammalian expression vectors to yield "designer T cells" from normal patient cells. This extends the approach of Anderson, Rosenberg and co-workers to introduce or augment expression of genes in patients' T cells in a therapeutic setting. Prior studies in model systems demonstrated that recombinant IgCD28TCR could direct modified T cells to respond to antigen targets with IL2 secretion, cellular proliferation, and cytotoxicity, the hallmarks of an effective, self-sustaining immune response. It therefore becomes of paramount interest to extend these studies to a human system of widespread clinical relevance to explore the clinical potential of this new technology. The target antigen for these studies is carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA) which is predominantly expressed on tumors of the colon and rectum, breast, pancreas and other sites.
Detailed description
CEA is perhaps the most prominent tumor marker among malignancies of epithelial origin: colorectal carcinoma, with 60-94% of tumors positive in patients with advanced disease; breast carcinoma, with 30-60% of metastatic cases positive for CEA; and cancers of the lung, liver, pancreas, head and neck, bladder, cervix and prostate with 30% or more with CEA+ tumors. The application of these therapies in the four Phase II/Pilot clinical sub studies listed below proceed after collecting patient lymphocytes by leukapheresis, which are then modified by transfer of the chimeric gene for Ig-CD28-TCRzeta. Cells are selected in culture with amplification and activation of the now-specific anti-tumor T cells. These are then re infused into the patients, with IL2 supplementation, and toxicity and response are monitored. There are four sub studies embedded within this Phase II Study of Second Generation Designer T Cells in CEA-expressing Adenocarcinomas. The embedded studies are: * A Phase II Pilot Study of Second Generation Anti CEA Designer T Cells in Gastric Cancers (CEA-G) * A Phase II Pilot Study of Second Generation Anti CEA Designer T Cells in Colorectal Cancers (CEA-C) * A Phase II Pilot Study of Second Generation Anti CEA Designer T Cells in Lung Cancers (CEA-L) * A Phase II Pilot Study of Second Generation Anti CEA Designer T Cells in Solid Tumors (CEA-S) A total of 12 subjects per protocol or a total of 48 subjects will be enrolled combining the enrollment of the 4 CEA-expressing protocols.
Conditions
Interventions
| Type | Name | Description |
|---|---|---|
| GENETIC | Gene Modified T Cells | Subjects will undergo T cell leukopheresis. The collected T cells will be genetically modified, and then re-infused peripherally. IL2 will be given concomitantly for 30 days post modified T cell infusion via CADD pump. |
Timeline
- Start date
- 2012-10-01
- Primary completion
- 2016-10-01
- Completion
- 2017-08-01
- First posted
- 2012-11-07
- Last updated
- 2016-06-14
Locations
1 site across 1 country: United States
Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT01723306. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.