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About
The purpose of the study is to investigate the safety of the investigational drug called cirmtuzumab when given for a duration of 6 to 12 months. Cirmtuzumab is a type of drug called a monoclonal antibody. This drug is designed to attach to a protein called ROR1 that is on the surface of chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) cells. This blocks growth and survival of the CLL cells. ROR1 is rarely expressed on healthy cells so this drug should target the cancer cells. Cirmtuzumab is considered experimental because its use is not approved by United States (US) Food and Drug Administration (FDA).
Although there is evidence from tests on laboratory animals that cirmtuzumab can decrease the number of CLL cells, the investigators do not know if this will work in humans. Therefore, the goal of this study is to see if cirmtuzumab is safe and tolerable in study participants when given for a duration of 6 to 12 months.
Full description
This is an open-label extension study to determine the safety and tolerability of cirmtuzumab given to participants who enrolled and completed the initial phase 1 trial in CLL without a dose-limiting toxicity.
UC-961 is administered by intravenous infusion every 14 days for 4 doses, then every 28 days for 4 doses, after which responses will be assessed. Patients with an objective response (meeting working group criteria for partial response or complete response) will continue at the same dose and schema. Patients with stable disease or progressive disease are eligible to increase the dose of UC-961 for another 6-month course.
Duration of UC-961 administration is until disease progression, treatment intolerance, or lack of clinical benefit.
Enrollment
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Inclusion criteria
Clinical and phenotypic verification of B cell CLL and measurable disease. Immunophenotyping of the leukemic cells (blood or marrow) must demonstrate a monoclonal (or light chain positive) B cell population with immunophenotype consistent with CLL (e.g., co-expressing CD19 and CD5).
Recovered from toxic effects attributed to UC-961 to grade 1 levels, or baseline.
Must have measurable disease, including one of the following:
Women of childbearing potential must agree not to become pregnant for the duration of the study. Both men and women must agree to use a barrier method of contraception for the duration of the study and until 10 weeks after the final dose of UC-961.
Subjects must have an ECOG performance status of 0-2.
Adequate hematologic function
Adequate renal function
Adequate hepatic function
Adequate coagulation tests
Exclusion criteria
Pregnant or breast-feeding women
May have had intervening therapy since completion of initial UC-961 dosing, but excluding the following:
Current infection requiring parenteral antibiotics.
Active infection with HIV, HBV, or HCV.
Concurrent malignancy or prior malignancy within the previous 3 years (other than completely resected carcinoma in situ, prostate cancer, or localized non-melanoma skin cancer).
Known central nervous system (CNS) involvement by malignancy.
Untreated autoimmunity such as autoimmune hemolytic anemia, or immune thrombocytopenia.
Uncompensated hypothyroidism (defined as TSH greater than 2x upper limit of normal not treated with replacement hormone).
Presence of more than 55% pro-lymphocytes in peripheral blood. Patients with Richter's transformation are not excluded.
Insufficient recovery from surgical-related trauma or wound healing.
Impaired cardiac function including any of the following:
Primary purpose
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Interventional model
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3 participants in 1 patient group
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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