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About
This phase II trial tests how well itacitinib works in in patients with immune related adverse events (irAEs) arising from immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICI) that do not respond to steroids (steroid refractory). Steroids are the usual treatment for these side effects. However, sometimes steroids do not improve or fix the side effects. Giving itacitinib may be effective in treating patients with known or suspected problems coming from ICIs, that do not resolve or improve with steroids, by reducing the patients immune system response that can cause the irAEs.
Full description
PRIMARY OBJECTIVE:
I. To define the rate of improvement of steroid-refractory immune related adverse events (irAEs) in patients treated with ICI at 28 days.
SECONDARY OBJECTIVES:
I. To define whether anti-tumor activity is preserved (response rate, progression free survival [PFS], T cell populations and function in the tumor).
II. To assess freedom from hospitalization and any grade improvement at 14 and 28 days.
III. To assess rate of therapy escalation (increased dose of steroids, other immunosuppressant) by day 60 follow up.
IV. To define cancer-specific and toxicity-specific survival at 6 months. V. To define the rate of improvement of steroid-refractory irAEs in patients treated with ICI at any time, and at 60 days (defined as improvement to Common Terminology Criteria for Adverse Events [CTCAE] Grade 0-1).
VI. To define the proportion of patients able to be tapered off steroids at Day 29 and at Day 30 follow up.
VII. To define the safety of itacitinib in patients with steroid-refractory irAEs.
OUTLINE:
Patients receive itacitinib orally (PO) and corticosteroids PO or intravenously (IV) on study. Patients may undergo endoscopy and skin biopsy throughout the study. Patients also undergo blood collection throughout the study.
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Inclusion criteria
Must have signed and dated an IRB/IEC approved written informed consent form in accordance with regulatory and institutional guidelines. This must be obtained before the performance of any protocol related procedures that are not part of normal participant care.
Must be willing and able to comply with scheduled visits, treatment schedule,laboratory tests, biopsies, and other requirements of the study.
Must have received at least one immune checkpoint inhibitor (ICI) therapy either as single agent(s) or in combination(s), including but not limited to nivolumab, ipilimumab, pembrolizumab, cemiplimab, atezolizumab, durvalumab, or avelumab.
Must experience at least one Grade 2, 3 or 4 (CTCAE Version 5.0) toxicity/immune-related adverse event (irAE) attributed to immune checkpoint inhibitor (ICI) therapy as diagnosed by the patient's study physician. This may be established by clinical, histological, or imaging criteria as defined below:
Symptoms must be attributed to an immune-related adverse event (irAE), with no infectious or alternative cause suspected by the patient's study physician.
Must be actively experiencing Grade 2+ irAE (at the time of screening) as broadly defined below:
Pneumonitis
Arthritis
Hepatitis (As defined by Grade 2+ elevation in AST or ALT (either or both values elevated)
Nephritis (As defined by either Grade 2+ elevation in creatinine and/or proteinuria of at least 2+ on urinalysis attributed to ICI)
Myocarditis (Given the vague nature of symptomatic myocarditis grading, troponin levels will be primarily used to grade myocarditis,( Troponin >2ng/ml), (Presumed diagnosis of myocarditis (myocardial infarction ruled out clinically)
Myositis (Defined as grade 2 myositis symptoms per CTCAE OR grade 2 elevations in creatinine kinase levels)
Neurologic toxicity
Encephalitis
Guillain Barre
Myasthenia Gravis
Pericarditis
Vasculitis
Gastritis
Other toxicities
Must have received oral or intravenous corticosteroids of at least 50mg per day prednisone equivalent dosing (approximately 1mg/kg daily) for ≥ 48 hours of therapy with worsening or lack of improvement to Grade 2.
May have been treated with additional immunomodulators (one or more) prior to study entry (e.g. infliximab, mycophenolate mofetil, intravenous immunoglobulin), provided such immunomodulators are discontinued prior to first dose of study therapy.
Adequate organ and marrow function as defined below:
Reproductive status:
Exclusion criteria
Toxicity deemed by patient's study physician to be primarily caused by another etiology (bacterial infection, other anticancer agents, etc.).
Ongoing serious infection requiring IV antibiotics.
Prior treatment with a JAK inhibitor within the past 8 weeks before first dose of protocol indicated treatment.
Known HIV infection with CD4 count < 200. (Testing not required by this study.)
History or current diagnosis of cardiac disease indicating significant risk of safety for participation in the study, such as uncontrolled or significant cardiac disease, including any of the following:
Known allergies, hypersensitivity, or intolerance to any study medications or excipients.
History of solid organ transplant or allogeneic stem cell transplant with active graft versus host disease.
Any condition that would, in the investigator's judgment, interfere with full participation in the study, including administration of study drug/treatment and attending required study visits; pose a significant risk to the participant; or interfere with interpretation of study data
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0 participants in 1 patient group
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Vanderbilt-Ingram Services for Timely Access
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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