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About
This is a first in human dose escalation trial to determine the safety of administering GPC2 CAR T cells in patients with advanced neuroblastoma.
Full description
Despite the use of intensive multimodal chemoradiotherapy, surgery, autologous stem cell transplant and disialoganglioside antigen (GD2)-targeted immunotherapy for the treatment of patients with high-risk neuroblastoma, approximately 60% of children still die from this disease and survivors suffer lifelong treatment related comorbidities. For patients who suffer a relapse after receiving therapy with standard of care multimodality treatment, there are no known curative options. Glypican 2 (GPC2) is highly expressed on the plasma membrane of most high-risk neuroblastomas, is further enriched in the tumor stem cell compartment, but is not expressed at significant levels on normal tissues, making it an ideal target for immune directed therapies. To therapeutically leverage GPC2's differential expression, a GPC2-directed CAR T cell therapy that potently inhibits the growth of neuroblastoma patient-derived xenografts has been developed. This investigation will be a single institution, open-label first in human, dose escalation and expansion study designed to assess the safety, tolerability, and manufacturing feasibility of GPC2 CAR T cells.
Enrollment
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Inclusion criteria
Signed Informed Consent Form
≥ 1 year of age
Disease status
Adequate organ function
Adequate performance status defined as Lanksy or Karnofsky performance score ≥60.
Subjects of reproductive potential must agree to use acceptable birth control methods.
Exclusion criteria
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
30 participants in 2 patient groups
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Central trial contact
Melissa Varghese; Yael Mosse, MD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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