Status and phase
Conditions
Treatments
About
This research study is studying a drug called Palbociclib in combination with Bazedoxifene (a type of endocrine therapy, which prevents breast cancer cell growth by blocking estrogen stimulation) as a possible treatment for this diagnosis.
The names of the study interventions involved in this study are:
Full description
This research study is a Phase I/II clinical trial. Phase II clinical trial tests the safety and effectiveness of an investigational intervention to learn whether the intervention works in treating a specific disease. "Investigational" means that the intervention is being studied. It also means that the FDA (the U.S. Food and Drug Administration) has not yet approved Palbociclib in combination with Bazedoxifene for use in participants with your type of cancer, but it has been approved for other uses (metastatic breast cancer).
Palbociclib is a drug that may stop cancer cells from growing. Palbociclib blocks activity of two closely related enzymes (proteins that help chemical reactions in the body occur), called Cyclin D Kinases 4 and 6 (CDK 4/6). These proteins are part of a pathway, or a sequence of steps which is known to control cell growth. Laboratory testing has shown that palbociclib may stop the growth of hormone receptor positive breast cancer.
Endocrine therapy prevents breast cancer cell growth by blocking the activity of the estrogen receptor. During this study the endocrine therapy will be bazedoxifene.
In this research study, the investigators are evaluating how safe palbociclib is and how well palbociclib in combination with bazedoxifene, a form of endocrine treatment, works in participants with a history of stage four breast cancer.
Enrollment
Sex
Ages
Volunteers
Inclusion criteria
Participants must have histologically confirmed invasive breast cancer that is metastatic or unresectable locally advanced. Histological documentation of metastatic/recurrent breast cancer is not required if there is unequivocal evidence for recurrence of the breast cancer.
Estrogen and/or progesterone receptor positive breast cancer (>10% staining), as determined by pathology from either primary or metastatic site(s). Central confirmation is not required.
HER2 negative, defined as 0-1+ by immunohistochemistry or FISH-negative (HER2 copy number <6 and HER2/CEP17 ratio < 2.0). Central confirmation is not required.
Postmenopausal women are eligible. Postmenopausal is defined as any of the following:
Participants must have measurable disease by RECIST 1.1. See section 11 for the definition of measurable disease.
Bone only disease if there are lytic lesions is also allowed and treatment response will be evaluated based on the MD Anderson criteria. See section 11.
Endocrine resistant breast cancer, defined as either:
Relapsed while on adjuvant endocrine therapy or within 1 year of completion of adjuvant endocrine therapy
--- -or-
Progression through at least one line of endocrine therapy for metastatic or locally advanced breast cancer. There is no limit on the number of prior endocrine therapies received.
Patients may have received up to one prior line of chemotherapy for metastatic or unresectable locally advanced breast cancer.
Patients may have initiated bisphosphonate therapy prior to start of protocol therapy. Bisphosphonate therapy may continue during protocol treatment. Such patients will have bone lesions considered evaluable for progression
Patients must be at least 2 weeks from prior chemotherapy or radiotherapy, or any investigational drug product, with adequate recovery of toxicity to baseline, or grade <1, with the exception of alopecia and hot flashes. There is no washout period for prior endocrine therapy.
ECOG Performance Status 0-1 (Appendix A)
Life expectancy of greater than 3 months
Willingness to undergo research biopsy under the following circumstances:
Patients with "easily accessible disease"
Patients with "accessible disease"
Other patients
Participants must have normal organ and marrow function as defined below:
Absolute neutrophil count ≥1,500/mcL
Platelets ≥100,000/mcL
Hgb ≥9 mg/dL (which may be post transfusion)
Total bilirubin ≤1.5 X institutional upper limit of normal (patients with
---- documented Gilbert's disease are allowed total bilirubin up to 3X ULN)
AST (SGOT)/ALT (SGPT) ≤ 2.5 X institutional upper limit if no liver metastases; and ≤ 5 X institutional upper limit if liver metastases are present.
Creatinine ≤ 2X institutional upper limit of normal
Baseline QTc ≤ 480 ms
Ability to take oral medications.
The effects of palbociclib and bazedoxifene on the developing human fetus are unknown. If, for any reason, a woman should become pregnant or suspect that she is pregnant while participating in this study, she should inform her treating physician immediately.
Women who are made postmenopausal through use of GNRH agonists, and men are required to use adequate contraception for the duration of protocol treatment and for 6 months after the last dose of palbociclib and bazedoxifene. Adequate contraception is defined as one highly effective non-hormonal form of contraception or two effective forms of non-hormonal contraception by the patient and/or partner.
Highly Effective Non-Hormonal Contraception Methods of birth control which result in a low failure rate (i.e., less than 1% per year) when used consistently and correctly are considered highly-effective forms of contraception. The following non-hormonal methods of contraception are acceptable:
True abstinence when this is in line with the preferred and usual lifestyle of the patient. [Periodic abstinence (e.g., calendar, ovulation, symptothermal post-ovulation methods) and withdrawal are not acceptable methods of contraception].
Male sterilization (with appropriate post-vasectomy documentation of the absence of sperm in the ejaculate). For female patients, the vasectomized male partner should be the sole partner.
--- OR
Effective Non-Hormonal Contraception
Alternatively two of the following effective forms of contraception may be used instead:
Placement of non-hormonal intrauterine device (IUD) or intrauterine system (IUS). Consideration should be given to the type of device being used, as there is higher failure rates quoted for certain types, e.g., steel or copper wire.
Condom with spermicidal foam/gel/film/cream/suppository.
Occlusive cap (diaphragm or cervical/vault caps) with spermicidal foam/gel/film/cream/suppository. The use of barrier contraceptives should always be supplemented with the use of spermicide.
Failure rates indicate that, when used alone, the diaphragm and ondom are not highly effective forms of contraception. Therefore, the use of additional spermicides does confer additional theoretical contraceptive protection.
However, spermicides alone are ineffective at preventing pregnancy when the whole ejaculate is spilled. Therefore, spermicides are not a barrier method of contraception and should not be used alone.
Exclusion criteria
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
36 participants in 1 patient group
Loading...
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
Clinical trials
Research sites
Resources
Legal