Status and phase
Conditions
Treatments
About
Background:
Multiple myeloma is a cancer of the blood plasma cells. It usually becomes resistant to standard treatments. Researchers have developed a procedure called gene therapy. It uses a person's own T cells, which are part of the immune system. The cells are changed in a lab and then returned to the person. Researchers hope the changed T cells will be better at recognizing and killing tumor cells.
Objective:
To test the safety of giving changed T cells to people with multiple myeloma.
Eligibility:
Adults ages 18-73 who have been diagnosed with multiple myeloma that has not been controlled with standard therapies.
Design:
Participants will be screened with:
Medical history
Physical exam
Blood tests
Heart function tests
Bone marrow sample taken by needle in a hip bone.
Scan of the chest, abdomen, and pelvis. They may have a brain scan.
Pregnancy test
Participants will have apheresis. Blood will be removed through an arm vein. The blood will be separated, and T cells removed. The rest of the blood will be returned through a vein in the other arm.
Participants will have a central line placed in a large vein in the arm or chest.
Participants will get 2 chemotherapy drugs by the central line over 3 days.
Two days later, participants will get the changed T cells by the central line. They will stay in the hospital at least 9 days.
Participants must stay near the hospital for 2 weeks.
Participants will have 8 follow-up visits over the next year for blood and urine tests. They may have scans.
Participants blood will be collected regularly over the next several years.
Full description
Background:
Objectives:
Primary
Eligibility:
Design:
Enrollment
Sex
Ages
Volunteers
Inclusion and exclusion criteria
Multiple Myeloma (MM) criteria:
B Cell Maturation Antigen (BCMA) expression must be detected on malignant plasma cells from either bone marrow or a plasmacytoma by flow cytometry or immunohistochemistry. If patient has plasmacytomas, one plasmacytoma must be biopsied to demonstrate BCMA expression. A specific quantitative level of BCMA expression for eligibility is not specified, but patients with multiple myeloma cells that are negative for BCMA by flow cytometry and immunohistochemistry on either bone marrow biopsy or plasmacytoma biopsy will not be enrolled. These assays must be performed at the National Institutes of Health (NIH). It is not required that the specimen used for BCMA determination comes from a sample that was obtained after the patients most recent treatment. If paraffin embedded unstained samples of bone marrow involved with MM or a plasmacytoma are available, these can be shipped to the NIH for BCMA staining, otherwise new biopsies will need to be performed for determination of BCMA expression.
BCMA expression will need to be documented on the majority of malignant plasma cells by flow cytometry at the NIH at some time after the original anti-BCMA chimeric antigen receptors (CARs) T-cell infusion in all patients undergoing a second anti-BCMA CAR T-cell infusion.
Bone marrow plasma cells must make up less than 50% of total bone marrow cells based on a bone marrow biopsy performed within 24 days of the start of protocol treatment.
Patients must have received at least 3 different prior treatment regimens for multiple myeloma
Must have prior exposure to an immunomodulatory imide drugs ("IMiD") such as lenalidamide and a proteasome inhibitor
Patients must have measurable MM as defined by at least one of the criteria below.
Other inclusion criteria:
EXCLUSION CRITERIA:
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
35 participants in 2 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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