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About
The purpose of this study is to find the highest dose of durvalumab that can be tolerated without causing very severe side effects when receiving standard treatment and to see what effects the study drug has on this type of cancer.
The researchers doing this study are also interested in looking for markers that will help predict which patients are most likely to be helped by durvalumab when receiving standard treatment and what effects durvalumab has on this type of cancer.
Full description
The standard or usual treatment for this type of disease at this point is to receive a drug called trastuzumab that targets the HER-2 receptor. Durvalumab is a new type of drug for many types of cancer. This drug is an antibody and laboratory tests show that it works by allowing the immune system to detect your cancer and reactivating the immune response. This may help to slow down the growth of cancer or may cause cancer cells to die. Durvalumab has been shown to shrink tumours in animals and has been studied in a few people and seems promising but it is not clear if it can offer better results than standard treatment alone.
The use of durvalumab when receiving standard treatment is being studied because it is thought that one way of over-coming resistance to the standard therapy is to add a drug that activates the immune system, as durvalumab has been shown to do, thus "re-sensitizing" immune function to kill cancer cells.
Enrollment
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Inclusion criteria
Patients must have histologically and/or cytologically confirmed HER-2 positive (assessed locally and by current ASCO/CAP criteria) breast cancer that is advanced/metastatic/recurrent or unresectable and for which no curative therapy exists.
Patients enrolled to the RP2D / expansion cohort must have accessible disease suitable for biopsy and have consented to biopsy prior to treatment and at the end of cycle 1. Paired biopsies are strongly recommended in all patients.
Presence of clinically and/or radiologically documented disease. All radiology studies must be performed within 28 days prior to registration (within 35 days if negative).
All patients must have measurable disease as defined by RECIST 1.1. The criteria for defining measurable disease are as follows:
Patients must be ≥ 18 years of age.
Patients must have an ECOG performance status of 0, 1, or 2.
Previous Therapy
Must have had prior exposure to a taxane, trastuzumab and pertuzumab* and preferably also prior exposure to TDM-1.
Cytotoxic Chemotherapy:
Other Systemic Therapy:
There is no limit to the number of prior regimens; however, patients may not have had prior immune therapies.
Patients must have recovered from all reversible toxicity related to prior chemotherapy or systemic therapy and have adequate washout as follows:
Radiation:
Surgery:
Laboratory Requirements (must be done within 7 days prior to registration)
Hematology
Absolute neutrophils ≥ 1.0 x 109/L
Platelets ≥ 100 x 109/L
Hemoglobin ≥ 90 g/L
Chemistry
Female patients of childbearing potential who are sexually active with a non-sterilized male partner must use at least one highly effective method of contraception while on study and for 90 days after the last dose of durvalumab and consult product monograph for trastuzumab. Male partners of a female subject and non-sterilized male patients who are sexually active with a female partner of childbearing potential must use male condom plus spermicide while on study and for 90 days after the last dose of durvalumab and consult product monograph for trastuzumab. Female partners of a male subject must use a highly effective method of contraception throughout this period. Cessation of birth control after this point should be discussed with a responsible physician.
Subjects should not donate blood while participating in this study, or for at least 90 days following the last infusion of durvalumab, or until the time specified in the prescribing information of trastuzumab, whichever occurs longest.
Patient consent must be appropriately obtained in accordance with applicable local and regulatory requirements. Each patient must sign a consent form prior to registration in the trial and prior to tests which are considered to be study specific to document their willingness to participate.
Patients who cannot give informed consent (i.e. mentally incompetent patients, or those physically incapacitated such as comatose patients) are not to be recruited into the study. Patients competent but physically unable to sign the consent form may have the document signed by their nearest relative or legal guardian. Each patient will be provided with a full explanation of the study before consent is requested.
Patients must be accessible for treatment and follow up. Patients registered on this trial must be treated and followed at the participating centre. This implies there must be reasonable geographical limits (for example: 1 ½ hour's driving distance) placed on patients being considered for this trial.
In accordance with CCTG policy, protocol treatment is to begin within 5 working days of patient registration.
Exclusion criteria
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
15 participants in 1 patient group
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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