Status and phase
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About
This is an open-label phase I/II study that will investigate the combination of dasatinib and rituximab therapy in patients with relapsed/refractory CLL. In phase I, eligible subjects will take either 100 mg or 140 mg of dasatinib daily along with rituximab on day 1 of each cycle for 6 cycles. In phase II, eligible subjects will all receive the same dose of dasatinib, as established in the phase I portion, along with rituximab on day 1 of each cycle for 6 cycles.
The investigators hypothesize that the combination of dasatinib and rituximab will demonstrate efficacy in the treatment of patients with relapsed/refractory CLL.
Full description
In phase I, patients will be enrolled in a standard "3+3" dose escalation scheme with two dasatinib cohort doses of 100 mg QD and 140 mg QD x 28 days/cycle with rituximab 500 mg/m2 on day 1 of each cycle (375 mg/m2 on day 1 of cycle 1 only). During the first cycle of each dose cohort patients will receive dasatinib on days -7 to 0 to allow for pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic analysis of single agent dasatinib dosing. Cohorts will be assessed for DLTs during the first 2 cycles. Treatment will continue for 6 cycles or until intolerable toxicity or disease progression. It is estimated that accrual of 3-6 patients will be completed in 4-6 months depending on DLTs observed.
The dasatinib dose established in phase I will move forward to the phase II setting. If there are no DLTs, the phase II dose will be chosen based on PD parameters. Dasatinib will be administered for 28 days/cycle with rituximab 500 mg/m2 on day 1 of each cycle (375 mg/m2 on day 1 of cycle 1 only) for 6 cycles or until intolerable toxicity or disease progression. For this portion of the study, up to an additional 22 patients will be enrolled over a 6-month period for a total of 28 patients at the chosen dose level.
For both, phase I and II, patients will complete up to six cycles of D+R therapy and endpoints will be evaluated 8 weeks after treatment. Patients will be followed until disease progression, study withdrawal or death. Patients with a PR or CR will be eligible to remain on dasatinib alone.
Enrollment
Sex
Ages
Volunteers
Inclusion criteria
Confirmed immunohistological diagnosis of B-cell CLL and Rai Stage III or IV disease, or stage 0-II disease that meets NCIWG criteria for active disease as indicated by any one of the following disease-related symptoms:
Relapsed/ Refractory CLL that has progress with ≥1 prior treatment including a purine nucleoside analog-containing regimen, alkylating agent, or antibody (rituximab or alemtuzumab) or intolerance to purine nucleoside analog-containing therapy or unwilling to receive chemotherapy treatment.
Age 18 or older
ECOG Performance Status 0-2 (Appendix B)
Adequate organ function:
Ability to take oral medication (dasatinib must be swallowed whole)
Women of childbearing potential (WOCBP) must have a negative serum or urine pregnancy test (sensitivity ≤ 25 IU/L HCG) within 72 hrs prior to the start of study drug administration
Persons of reproductive potential must agree to use an adequate method of contraception throughout treatment and for at least 4 weeks after study drug is stopped
Ability to understand and the willingness to sign a written informed consent document
Exclusion criteria
No prior CLL-related treatment within 28 days before starting treatment with dasatinib.
No concurrent use of other investigation agent.
Concurrent medical condition which may increase the risk of toxicity, including:
Uncontrolled or significant cardiovascular disease, including:
History of significant bleeding disorder unrelated to CLL, including:
Hypokalemia or hypomagnesemia if it cannot be corrected
Pleural or pericardial effusion of any grade
Past or current malignancy, except for:
Major systemic or other illness including active infection or active secondary malignancy that would, in the opinion of the Investigator, interfere with the patient's ability to comply with the protocol, compromise patient safety, or interfere with the interpretation of the study results
No history of allergic reaction to dasatinib.
Use of Prohibited Concomitant Medications
Subjects requiring any of the following prohibited therapies should not be enrolled:
CYP3A4 Inhibitors: Dasatinib is a CYP3A4 substrate. Concomitant use of dasatinib and drugs that inhibit CYP3A4 (e.g., ketoconazole, itraconazole, erythromycin, clarithromycin, ritonavir, atazanavir, indinavir, nefazodone, nelfinavir, saquinavir, telithromycin) may increase exposure to dasatinib and should be avoided.
In patients receiving treatment with dasatinib, close monitoring for toxicity and a dasatinib dose reduction should be considered if systemic administration of a potent CYP3A4 inhibitor cannot be avoided.
-Drugs that may decrease dasatinib plasma concentration: CYP3A4 Inducers: Drugs that induce CYP3A4 activity may decrease dasatinib plasma concentrations. In patients in whom CYP3A4 inducers (eg, dexamethasone, phenytoin, carbamazepine, rifampicin, phenobarbital) are indicated, alternative agents with less enzyme induction potential should be used. If dasatinib must be administered with a CYP3A4 inducer, a dose increase in dasatinib should be considered and approved by the principal investigator.
-Drugs that may have their plasma concentration altered by dasatinib: CYP3A4 Substrates: CYP3A4 substrates known to have a narrow therapeutic index such as alfentanil, astemizole, terfenadine, cisapride, cyclosporine, fentanyl, pimozide, quinidine, sirolimus, tacrolimus, or ergot alkaloids (ergotamine, dihydroergotamine) should be administered with caution in patients receiving dasatinib.
May decrease dasatinib plasma concentrations unpredictably. Patients receiving dasatinib should not take St. John's wort.
Subjects enrolled in this study should not take or begin to take concomitant medications known to prolong the QT interval. If such medications are already being taken by the patient before study starts, a wash-out period of ≥ 7days is required prior to starting dasatinib. Medications known to prolong the QT interval and/or are generally accepted to have a risk of causing Torsades de Pointes ventricular arrhythmia are (see http://www.qtdrugs.org/medical-pros/drug-lists/drug-lists.htm):
Quinidine, procainamide, disopyramide
Amiodarone, sotalol, ibutilide, dofetilide
Erythromycin, clarithromycin
Chlorpromazine, haloperidol, mesoridazine, thioridazine, pimozide
Cisapride, bepridil, droperidol, methadone, arsenic, chloroquine, domperidone, halofantrine, levomethadyl, pentamidine, sparfloxacin, lidoflazine Should the Investigator believe that beginning therapy with a potentially QT prolonging medication (other than the ones explicitly prohibited) is vital to an individual subject's care, the Investigator must check that the subject's prior on-therapy ECG has not shown a QTcF ≥ 450 msec or an increase in QTc ≥ 60 msec over the baseline value.
Subjects enrolled in this study should not take concomitant medications that durably inhibit platelet function. For such medications, a wash-out period of ≥ 7days is required prior to starting dasatinib. (Agents that inhibit platelet function transiently or inhibit coagulation by other mechanisms are restricted.)
Medications that directly and durably inhibit platelet function include:
Medications that directly and durably inhibit anticoagulation include:
Women who are pregnant (including having a positive pregnancy test) or breastfeeding, or unable/unwilling to practice an acceptable method to avoid pregnancy for the entire study period and for at least 4 weeks after cessation of study drug, or men who are sexual partners thereof.
Prisoners or subjects who are compulsorily detained (involuntarily incarcerated) for treatment of either a psychiatric or physical (e.g., infectious) illness
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
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3 participants in 2 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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