Status and phase
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About
Patients with relapsed or refractory leukemia often develop resistance to chemotherapy and some patients who relapse following CD19 directed therapy relapse with CD19 negative leukemia. For this reason, the investigators are attempting to use T-cells obtained directly from the patient, which can be genetically modified to express two chimeric antigen receptors (CARs). One is to recognize CD19 and the other is to recognize CD22, both of which are proteins expressed on the surface of the leukemic cell in patients with CD19+CD22+ leukemia. The CAR enables the T-cell to recognize and kill the leukemic cell through recognition of CD19 and CD22. This is a phase 1 study designed to determine the safety of the CAR+ T-cells and the feasibility of making enough to treat patients with CD19+CD22+ leukemia.
Enrollment
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Ages
Volunteers
Inclusion criteria
First 2 subjects: male and female subjects age ≥18 and < 27 years (as of 2/16/18 the first 2 subjects were enrolled and treated); subsequent subjects <31 years.
Diagnosis of CD19+22+ leukemia
Disease status:
Asymptomatic from CNS involvement, if present, and in the opinion of the Principal Investigator with a reasonable expectation that disease burden can be controlled in the interval between enrollment and T-cell infusion. Subjects with significant neurologic deterioration will not be eligible for T-cell infusion until stabilized.
Free from active GVHD and off immunosuppressive GVHD therapy for 4 weeks prior to enrollment
Lansky or Karnofsky performance score of at least 50
Life expectancy of at least 8 weeks
Recovered from acute toxic effects of all prior chemotherapy, immunotherapy, and radiotherapy
At least 7 days post last chemotherapy administration (excluding intrathecal maintenance chemotherapy)
At least 7 das post last systemic corticosteroids administration (unless physiologic replacement dosing)
No prior genetically modified cell therapy that is still detectable or virotherapy
Adequate organ function
Adequate laboratory values
Willing to participate in long-term follow-up for up to 15 years, if enrolled in the study and receive T cell infusion
Patients of childbearing/fathering potential must agree to use highly effective contraception from the time of initial T cell infusion through 12 months following the last T cell infusion
Exclusion criteria
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
78 participants in 2 patient groups
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Central trial contact
Colleen Annesley, MD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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