Status and phase
Conditions
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About
The goal of this clinical trial is to learn if N17350 works to treat advanced solid tumors in adults. It will also learn about the safety of N17350 and help determine the best dose to use in future studies.
The main questions it aims to answer are:
Participants will:
Full description
This is a Phase 1/2 clinical study evaluating an investigational medicine called N17350 in adults with advanced solid tumors that have spread or cannot be removed by surgery and for which standard treatment options are no longer working, are not available, or are not appropriate.
N17350 will be administered by injection directly into tumor lesions (intratumoral injection). Giving N17350 into the tumor is intended to deliver treatment to the cancer site and may help stimulate an immune response against the tumor.
This is an open-label study, meaning all participants will receive N17350 and both participants and the study team will know the treatment being given. The study is designed to evaluate safety, identify an optimal dose, and look for early signs of anti-tumor activity.
Study Parts
The study includes two parts:
Part 1: Dose Finding (Phase 1) Small groups of participants will receive different dose levels of N17350. The main purpose is to understand how safe N17350 is and to determine a dose that can be given safely and is suitable for further study. Safety information from participants will be reviewed as dose levels are increased or adjusted.
Part 2: Dose Expansion (Phase 2) After a dose is selected from Part 1, additional participants will receive N17350 at that dose. This part is designed to better understand safety at the selected dose and to further evaluate how well N17350 may work in participants with advanced solid tumors. Depending on the study plan, expansion may include groups of participants with specific tumor types.
Treatment and Visits
Participants will receive N17350 injections into tumor lesions every second week for 8 or 12 weeks. Participants will attend clinic visits for treatment administration and ongoing monitoring.
Throughout the study, participants will undergo safety evaluations, which may include:
Review of side effects and other medical problems Physical examinations and vital signs Blood and urine tests Heart monitoring (such as ECG), if required Review of medications and overall health status
Participants will also undergo evaluations to measure how their cancer responds to treatment, which may include:
Imaging scans (such as CT or MRI) to measure tumors over time Clinical assessments of injected lesions and other tumor sites
Biomarker and Research Samples
The study may include collection of blood samples and, when required, tumor samples to help researchers understand how N17350 affects the tumor and the immune system. These samples may be used to study markers of immune activation and other biological changes that could be associated with response or side effects.
Outcomes and Goals
The main goals of the study are to:
Determine the type and frequency of side effects and evaluate overall safety
Identify a recommended dose and dosing approach for future studies
Evaluate early signs of treatment activity, such as tumor shrinkage, stable disease, or delayed tumor growth
Explore biological changes in blood and tumor tissue that may help explain how N17350 works
Study Hypothesis
The study hypothesis is that N17350 can be administered safely by intratumoral injection at doses that are tolerable, and that treatment may lead to anti-tumor effects in some participants with advanced solid tumors, potentially by helping the immune system recognize and attack cancer cells.
Enrollment
Sex
Ages
Volunteers
Inclusion criteria
Age ≥18 years (or legal age of consent in the study jurisdiction).
Able to provide written informed consent and willing/able to comply with study procedures, visits, and follow-up.
Advanced solid tumor malignancy (excluding lymphoma and other hematologic malignancies), with disease that has progressed on, is intolerant of, or is ineligible for standard therapies known to provide clinical benefit, or for whom no standard therapy is available.
ECOG performance status 0-1.
Measurable disease per IT-RECIST (Parts A1/A2) and RECIST v1.1 (Part A3), as applicable.
At least one injectable tumor lesion, meeting superficial or visceral criteria and deemed safe/accessible for injection:
Adequate recovery from prior therapy: toxicities from prior anticancer treatment resolved to Grade ≤1 or baseline (except alopecia, controlled endocrine toxicities, or other stable toxicities as allowed per protocol/sponsor).
Adequate organ function, including hepatic, renal, and coagulation parameters per protocol-defined thresholds.
Adequate bone marrow function without transfusion support within 7 days prior to enrollment, per protocol-defined thresholds.
Tumor tissue requirements: willingness to provide a pre-treatment tumor biopsy and on-study post-treatment biopsy, if an accessible lesion is available and safe for biopsy, and biopsy does not interfere with injection/response assessment; and/or availability of archival tumor tissue (obtained within 2 years prior to treatment), per protocol.
Contraception requirements: participants of reproductive potential agree to use effective contraception and avoid pregnancy/fathering children from screening through 30 days after last dose; women of childbearing potential must have a negative pregnancy test within 14 days prior to first dose, per protocol.
Exclusion criteria
Serious psychiatric, medical, or other condition that would interfere with study participation or protocol procedures, in the investigator's judgment.
History of solid organ transplant.
Alpha-1 antitrypsin deficiency.
Hereditary or acquired bleeding disorder/coagulation factor deficiency.
Active autoimmune disease requiring systemic treatment within the past 6 months, except clinically stable autoimmune conditions in remission not requiring systemic therapy (per protocol).
Baseline QTcF >480 ms.
Pregnant or breastfeeding.
Prior severe immune-mediated adverse event (imAE) from immunotherapy: ≥Grade 3 imAE within the past 16 weeks, any Grade 4 life-threatening imAE, or any neurologic/ocular AE of any grade (except controlled endocrine AEs on stable replacement therapy per protocol).
Another active malignancy (current or within the past 2 years) other than the disease under study, except specified low-risk cancers treated with curative intent or under active surveillance (per protocol).
Recent anticancer therapy: receipt of systemic anticancer therapy (including investigational agents) within 2 weeks prior to first dose (or 4 weeks for monoclonal antibodies/ADCs/other long half-life biologics), or within 5 half-lives, whichever is shorter.
Recent radiotherapy within 2 weeks prior to first dose.
Unresolved toxicity from prior anticancer therapy to >Grade 1 or not at baseline (except Grade ≤2 neuropathy and other allowed exceptions per protocol).
Uncontrolled or unstable brain metastases (eligible only if neurologically stable for ≥4 weeks, and off steroids or on stable/decreasing steroids ≤10 mg/day prednisone equivalent; carcinomatous meningitis excluded).
Active infection requiring systemic antibacterial, antifungal, or antiviral therapy within 14 days prior to first dose.
Chronic viral infections not meeting protocol criteria:
Use of systemic anticoagulants (e.g., warfarin, LMWH, DOACs) within 14 days prior to first dose.
Chronic systemic corticosteroids >10 mg/day prednisone equivalent, or systemic immunosuppressive/anti-inflammatory medications within 4 weeks prior to first dose, except permitted topical/inhaled/local formulations or short courses for premedication per protocol.
Known allergy/hypersensitivity to N17350 or any excipients.
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
275 participants in 10 patient groups
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Central trial contact
Onchilles Pharma Clinical Trials
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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