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About
This phase II trial studies how well selinexor work in treating patients with small-cell lung cancer that has returned after a period of improvement. One specific way cancer cells continue to grow is by getting rid of certain proteins called "tumor suppressor proteins: that would normally cause cancer cells to die. Selinexor works by trapping "tumor suppressing proteins" within the cell and may cause the cancer cells to die or stop growing.
Full description
PRIMARY OBJECTIVES:
I. To evaluate the efficacy of single agent selinexor as measured by progression free survival (PFS) in patients with relapsed chemotherapy-sensitive small cell lung cancer.
SECONDARY OBJECTIVES:
I. To evaluate the objective tumor response rate and disease control rate as determined by radiographic response.
II. To evaluate the overall survival (OS) in patients with relapsed small cell lung cancer.
III. To evaluate safety and tolerability of single agent selinexor in these patient populations.
IV. Comparison between each patient's time to progression (TTP) on selinexor with the TTP of his/her previous therapy(ies).
V. To evaluate correlative endpoints including tumor biopsy and analysis of secreted factors, leukocyte ribonucleic acid (RNA) analysis.
TERTIARY OBJECTIVES:
I. Analysis of secreted factors (nerve growth factor [NGF], brain-derived neurotrophic factor [BDNF]).
II. Tumor biopsy (baseline and cycle 2).
OUTLINE:
Patients receive selinexor orally (PO) twice weekly. Courses repeat every 21 days in the absence of disease progression or unacceptable toxicity.
After completion of study treatment, patients are followed up monthly for 3 months, every 3 months for 1 year, and then every 6 months thereafter.
Enrollment
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Inclusion criteria
Exclusion criteria
Primary refractory disease (progressive disease on initial platinum based chemotherapy) or chemotherapy-resistant disease (disease progression within 90 days of completion of initial chemotherapy)
Patients who are pregnant or lactating
Radiation, chemotherapy, or immunotherapy or any other anticancer therapy =< 2 weeks prior to cycle 1 day 1; any clinical trial therapy (including investigational anti-cancer study) =< 3 weeks prior to cycle 1 day 1
Prior treatment with selinexor
Major surgery within 3 weeks before day 1
Unstable cardiovascular function:
Uncontrolled infection requiring parenteral antibiotics, antivirals, or antifungals within one week prior to first dose; patients with controlled infection or on prophylactic antibiotics are permitted in the study
Known to be human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) seropositive
Known active hepatitis A, B, or C infection; or known to be positive for hepatitis C virus (HCV) RNA or hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAg) (hepatitis B virus [HBV] surface antigen)
Serious psychiatric or medical conditions that could interfere with treatment
History of seizures, movement disorders or cerebrovascular accident within the past 5 years prior to cycle 1 day 1
Concurrent therapy with approved or investigational anticancer therapeutic other than steroids
Patients with > 3 liver metastases at time of enrollment
Patients with coagulation problems and active bleeding in the last month (peptic ulcer, epistaxis, spontaneous bleeding)
Patients with significantly diseased or obstructed gastrointestinal tract, malabsorption, uncontrolled vomiting or diarrhea or inability to swallow oral medications
Patients who are severely underweight (body mass index [BMI] less than 17) or patients with a body surface area (BSA) < 1.4 m^2 as calculated per Dubois 1916 or Mosteller 1987
Uncontrolled brain metastases or leptomeningeal involvement; patients with brain metastases are permitted if they have received appropriate therapy and demonstrated control of the brain metastases or leptomeningeal disease following therapy; patients with known brain metastases will require magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) brain to demonstrate disease control prior to enrollment (lack of symptom progression for two weeks off therapeutic doses of steroids, excluding chronic steroids used for control of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease [COPD])
Prior cancer diagnosis is allowed if patient is disease-free for >= 3 years, or disease free for < 3 years for treated basal cell/ squamous cell skin cancer or in situ cervical cancer
Primary purpose
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1 participants in 1 patient group
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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