Status and phase
Conditions
Treatments
About
This research study is for people who have been waiting for a kidney transplant for at least one year, and who have a cPRA of 99.5% or higher. Having a cPRA of 99.5% or higher means that your immune system would reject 99.5% of kidneys available for transplant. The study will test whether new products called Chimeric Antigen Receptor T Cells (CAR T Cells), when given with chemotherapy, is safe and will reduce cPRA.
The main study will last up to 2 years: Participants will have up to 30 clinic or hospital visits over a one-year period. If a transplant takes place, there will be 9 more visits after transplant. Long term follow up is required by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for 15 years after receiving CAR T cell.
The primary objective is to evaluate the safety and feasibility of administering CART BCMA + huCART-19 following lymphodepletion, including determination of optimal tolerated regimen (OTR) and/or recommended phase 2 regimen, according to the incidence of dose limiting toxicity (DLT) in highly sensitized patients awaiting kidney transplant.
Full description
CTOT-46 will enroll up to up to 20 highly sensitized kidney transplant candidates at 3 centers. There will be a safety run-in and 3 treatment cohorts to assess the safety and pharmacodynamics of CART-BCMA and huCART-19.
Following screening and enrollment, the subject will undergo leukapheresis to collect T cells for CAR T cell manufacturing. Subsequently, subjects will undergo lymphodepleting chemotherapy followed by CART-BCMA and huCART19 cell infusions. A secondary objective is to evaluate the efficacy of study treatment to reduce cPRA and determine the duration cPRA reduction.
Enrollment
Sex
Ages
Volunteers
Inclusion criteria
Male or female patients aged 18-65 years with kidney failure requiring hemodialysis.
United Network for Organ Sharing (UNOS) listed for kidney transplant for at least 1 year.
Patients must meet one of the following two criteria:
Based on center-specific listing policies, a cPRA in UNet Waitlist that is ≥99.5% (the candidate must be eligible for additional priority of kidneys equivalent to individuals with a 100% cPRA)
Able to understand and give written informed consent to participate in all aspects of the study.
Willing to stay within 2 hours of the home study site for at least 28 days after the last T cell infusion
Subjects of reproductive potential must agree to use contraception for at least one year after CAR T Cell infusion
In the absence of contraindication, vaccinations must be up to date per the DAIT Guidance for Patients in Transplant Trials and include TdAP
Positive for EBV capsid IgG
Negative testing for latent TB infection within 3 months prior to enrollment. Testing should be conducted using either a PPD or interferon-gamma release assay (i.e. QuantiFERON-TB, T-SPOT.TB). Patients with a positive test for latent TB infection must complete appropriate therapy for Latent Tuberculosis Infection (LTBI). A subject is considered eligible only if they have a negative test for LTBI within 3 months prior to enrollment OR they have appropriately completed LTBI therapy prior to transplant. Latent TB infection treatment regimens should be among those endorsed by the CDC
Hemoglobin ≥9g/dL
ANC ≥ 1,800/μL, > 1,200/ μL for patients with Duffy-null associated neutrophil count (DANC)
Absolute Lymphocyte Counts ≥500/μL or CD3 T cell Count ≥150/μL
Platelet count ≥120,000/μL
Exclusion criteria
Lymphodepleting Chemotherapy Eligibility:
Study entry eligibility must be re-assessed prior to starting lymphodepletion. In addition, subjects must undergo respiratory viral testing on nasal or nasopharyngeal swabs (per institutional practice) for SARS-CoV-2 and influenza within 7 days prior to the first planned lymphodepletion chemotherapy.
CAR T Cell Infusion Eligibility:
The criteria below will be assessed by the investigator following lymphodepleting chemotherapy and before administration of CAR T cells. Subjects who do not satisfy these criteria may have CAR T cell infusion delayed until such time as criteria are satisfied. Subjects who receive lymphodepleting chemotherapy but in whom CAR T cell infusion is delayed >4 weeks after the first day of lymphodepleting chemotherapy will receive a second cycle of lymphodepleting chemotherapy prior to CAR T cell infusion. For subjects receiving fludarabine, a second cycle of cyclophosphamide can be administered, but fludarabine will not be repeated.
Subjects must not have developed deterioration in performance status or overall clinical condition or new laboratory abnormalities that would, in the opinion of the treating investigator, render it unsafe to proceed with CAR T cell infusion. The following are specific conditions that warrant delaying CAR T cell infusion:
Subjects must have adhered to restrictions on pre-infusion therapy.
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
20 participants in 1 patient group
Loading...
Central trial contact
Mary Kaminski, PA
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
Clinical trials
Research sites
Resources
Legal