Status and phase
Conditions
Treatments
About
In a small case series, the investigators identified five patients who had an initial response to standard daratumumab (weekly for 2 cycles, every other week for 4 cycles, then monthly thereafter) either as mono- or combination therapy, who then had daratumumab frequency escalated when early biochemical progression was noted, an investigational endeavor. In this series, patients received a median of 5 additional cycles of daratumumab at an escalated frequency (range: 2-8). Additionally, the median change in involved paraprotein after one cycle of weekly-escalated dara was -40% (range: -67% to +5%), with most achieving prior partial response or stable disease.
In patients who initially have at least a partial response (PR) to daratumumab, who then have biochemical progression following de-escalation, it is conceivable that CD38 saturation is not optimized at the every 4 weeks dosing interval. The investigators believe that escalating the frequency of daratumumab in patients with biochemical progression, in this investigational setting, may recapture the initial response, delay clinical progression, and/or delay treatment changes.
Sex
Ages
Volunteers
Inclusion criteria
The interval between labs would generally be 1 to 4 weeks, and the second set of labs may be the screening assessment. Biochemical progression is defined as an increase of > 25% from lowest response value in any one or more of the following:
Serum M-component (the absolute increase must be > 0.5 g/dL)
Urine M-component (the absolute increase must be > 200 mg/24 h)
The difference between involved and uninvolved FLC levels (the absolute increase must be > 10 mg/dL; only in patients without measurable serum and urine M-protein levels)
Exclusion criteria
Evidence of clinical progression/relapse over the 3 months prior to confirmed eligibility, based on centralized laboratory data performed at Washington University School of Medicine or radiographic data independently reviewed at Washington University School of Medicineas defined as:
Evidence of myeloma with in the CNS
Diagnosis of plasma cell leukemia
Prior allergic reaction to daratumumab or medications used in the treatment backbone
Interruption in daratumumab therapy for any reason in the preceding 6 months longer than 8 weeks.
Pregnant or lactating females - woman and men of childbearing potential are required to employ an effective contraceptive method as outlined in the ICF
Concurrent malignancy other than MM requiring active treatment excluding skin cancer managed with local therapy
Compromised cardiovascular function defined as any of the following:
Severe persistent asthma (FEV1<60% and/or daily symptoms) or severe COPD defined clinically or by historical pulmonary function tests with an FEV1 <50% predicted
Seropositive for human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)
Seropositive for hepatitis B (defined by a positive test for hepatitis B surface antigen [HBsAg]). Subjects with resolved infection (ie, subjects who are HBsAg negative but positive for antibodies to hepatitis B core antigen [anti-HBc] and/or antibodies to hepatitis B surface antigen [anti-HBs]) must be screened using real-time polymerase chain reaction (PCR) measurement of hepatitis B virus (HBV) DNA levels. Those who are PCR positive will be excluded. EXCEPTION: Subjects with serologic findings suggestive of HBV vaccination (anti-HBs positivity as the only serologic marker) AND a known history of prior HBV vaccination, do not need to be tested for HBV DNA by PCR.
Seropositive for hepatitis C (except in the setting of a sustained virologic response [SVR], defined as aviremia at least 12 weeks after completion of antiviral therapy)
Any other clinically significant medical disease or condition that, in the judgement of the investigator, would prevent the participant from safely participating in the trials.
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
0 participants in 2 patient groups
Loading...
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
Clinical trials
Research sites
Resources
Legal