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About
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the safety of CC-97540 in relapsed or refractory severe antineutrophil cytoplasmic antibody (ANCA)-associated vasculitis.
Full description
This is a two-part, non-randomized, open label, single site Phase I/II study to assess the safety and efficacy of CC-97540 CAR T cell products for treatment of relapsing or refractory ANCA-associated vasculitis. This study consists of 2 parts: Part A (Safety Lead-In), a verification of the safety of the infusion dose, and Part B (Expansion), in which participants receive CC-97540 CAR T cells at the dose confirmed in Part A.
This is a Phase I/II clinical trial. Phase I/II clinical trials test the safety and effectiveness of an investigational therapy to learn whether the therapy works in treating a specific disease. "Investigational" means that the therapy is being studied.
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has not approved CC-97540 as a treatment for any disease.
It is expected that about 12 people will take part in this research study.
Enrollment
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Volunteers
Inclusion criteria
Able to voluntarily provide written informed consent prior to the performance of any study-specific procedures.
-≥18 years of age at the time of signing informed consent.
Classification as granulomatosis with polyangiitis (GPA) or microscopic polyangiitis (MPA) per the American College of Rheumatology (ACR) / European Alliance of Associations for Rheumatology (EULAR) 2022 definitions (Robson et al., 2022, Suppiah et al., 2022) (see Appendix A).
Current or historical positive proteinase 3 (PR3) or myeloperoxidase (MPO) antibody testing or a cytoplasmic (cANCA) or perinuclear antineutrophil cytoplasmic antibody (pANCA) immunofluorescence pattern. (Antibodies and immunofluorescence may currently be negative.)
Active ANCA-associated vasculitis within 6 weeks of screening presenting as either:
Relapsed disease (BVASv3 > 0 following prior remission) despite standard-of-care treatment per the ACR/Vasculitis Foundation (VF) Guidelines for the Management of ANCA-Associated Vasculitis (Chung et al., 2021), or
Refractory disease (persistent BVASv3 positivity) despite standard-of-care treatment per the ACR/VF Guidelines (Chung et al., 2021). Refractory disease is defined as persistent BVASv3 positivity despite at least 6 weeks of appropriate guideline-indicated standard-of-care treatment per the ACR/VF Guidelines for the Management of ANCA-Associated Vasculitis.
Appropriate guideline-indicated standard-of-care treatment per the ACR/VF Guidelines for the Management of ANCA-Associated Vasculitis includes:
either rituximab or cyclophosphamide for severe disease;
or, methotrexate or azathioprine for non-severe disease.
-Severe disease activity defined as:
1 or more major BVAS/WG criteria or at least 3 minor BVASv3 items (see Appendix B), or
1 or more of cutaneous ulceration, retroorbital disease, sinonasal disease with bony or cartilage damage, subglottic stenosis, or renal involvement, or
Unanimous expert committee consensus on severity (3/3 agreement).
Hemoglobin ≥ 8 g/dL
Platelet count ≥ 75,000/uL
Exclusion criteria
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
12 participants in 1 patient group
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Central trial contact
Sebastian Unizony, MD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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