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Allogeneic Natural Killer (NK) Cells in Patients With Advanced Metastatic Breast Cancer

University of Minnesota (UMN) logo

University of Minnesota (UMN)

Status and phase

Terminated
Phase 2

Conditions

Breast Cancer

Treatments

Drug: Fludarabine
Other: Natural killer cell infusion
Drug: Cyclophosphamide
Biological: Interleukin-2
Radiation: Total body irradiation

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT00376805
UMN-MT2005-08 (Other Identifier)
UMN-0505M70037 (Other Identifier)
UMN-2005LS033

Details and patient eligibility

About

RATIONALE: Giving chemotherapy before a donor natural killer (NK) cell infusion helps stop the growth of tumor cells. It also helps stop the patient's immune system from rejecting the donor's cells. Giving NK cells from a related donor may kill the tumor cells.

PURPOSE: This study furthers the research of previous studies (MT2003-01 and MT2004-25) which were to determine a specific preparatory regimen (cyclophosphamide and fludarabine) could create an environment in which infused NK cells can grow and effectively treat patients with relapsed AML. This study will test the previous regimen in patients with breast cancer.

Full description

We believe that administration of related allogeneic (donor) natural killer cells along with IL-2, rather than autologous natural killer cells will provide the most effective anticancer therapy in this setting, and wish to test this approach. To do this, we will select a related donor who is partially HLA-matched with the study subject, to increase the likelihood that donor natural killer cells will kill the subject's cancer cells. We will also give chemotherapy drugs to increase the subject's tolerance for the donor natural killer cells. We will test the use of donor natural killer (NK) cell infusions. The immune system has a special way that it sees and identifies cancer cells or foreign agents (like viruses). The subject's own NK cells may not attack their cancer because NK cells see the tumor cells as "self" (a coating on the cell surface identifies a cell as "self" or "non-self"). We have reason to believe that NK cells may not kill cancer cells because NK cells have special receptors that "turn them off" when they encounter cancer cells (by seeing them as "self"). We may be able to get around this problem by using donor NK cells. Finally, subjects will receive a dose of subcutaneous IL-2 3 times a week (for 2 weeks) which has been proven safe in our previous studies to stimulate the natural killer cells.

Enrollment

6 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Diagnosis of metastatic breast cancer that has progressed on or failed at least one salvage chemotherapy regimen for metastatic disease and that meets the following disease specific related criteria:

    • Measureable metastatic disease per Response Evaluation Criteria In Solid Tumor (RECIST) - bone only not eligible.
    • Disease progression while receiving prior therapy with a hormonal agent (if estrogen/progesterone receptor-positive) and/or trastuzumab (Herceptin®) (if HER2-neu positive)
    • Brain metastases allowed provided they are stable for ≥ 3 months after prior treatment
  • Related HLA-haploidentical natural killer cell donor available (by ≥ class I serologic typing)

  • Male or female

  • Performance status 50-100%

  • Platelet count ≥ 80,000/mm³ (unsupported by transfusions)

  • Hemoglobin ≥ 9 g/dL (unsupported by transfusions)

  • Absolute neutrophil count ≥ 1,000/mm³ (unsupported by sargramostim [GM-CSF] or filgrastim [G-CSF])

  • Creatinine ≤ 2.0 mg/dL

  • Liver function tests < 5 times normal

  • Not pregnant or nursing

  • Negative pregnancy test

  • Fertile patients must use effective contraception

  • LVEF > 40%*

  • Pulmonary function > 50%* (DLCO corrected AND FEV_1)

  • No active infection (i.e., afebrile, off antibiotics, and no uninvestigated radiologic lesions)

Exclusion criteria

  • At least 3 days since prior prednisone or other immunosuppressive medications
  • No other concurrent therapy for cancer

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

N/A

Interventional model

Single Group Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

6 participants in 1 patient group

All Treated Patients
Experimental group
Description:
All patients with advanced metastatic breast cancer treated with natural killer cells after receiving fludarabine, cyclosphosphamide and total body irradiation.
Treatment:
Biological: Interleukin-2
Radiation: Total body irradiation
Drug: Cyclophosphamide
Drug: Fludarabine
Other: Natural killer cell infusion

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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