Eligible untreated patients will receive single arm venetoclax, bendamustine and
rituximab as induction therapy. After 6 cycles, maintenance rituximab may be administered
per physician discretion.
Venetoclax is an oral Bcl-2 family protein inhibitor. It targets the B-cell lymphoma 2
(BCL-2) protein, which supports cancer cell growth and is overexpressed in many patients
with mantle cell lymphoma. Venetoclax may make the cancer cells sensitive to
chemotherapy. This may help to slow down the growth of cancer or may cause cancer cells
to die.
The purpose of this study is to see if venetoclax in combination with bendamustine and
rituximab chemotherapy is effective in treating people who have mantle cell lymphoma and
to examine the side effects, good and bad, associated with this combination.
Study sponsor and potential other locations can be found on ClinicalTrials.gov for NCT03834688.
Locations matching your search criteria
United States
Kansas
Kansas City
University of Kansas Cancer CenterStatus: Active
Contact: Sherri Miller
Phone: 913-945-7658
Mantle cell lymphoma (MCL) is a subtype of Non-Hodgkin Lymphoma (NHL) which is considered
incurable with conventional therapy. With an incidence of approximately 70,000 cases
diagnosed in the United States (US) per year, the disease is rare.
This is an open-label phase II study of venetoclax in combination with bendamustine and
rituximab. Patients will receive induction therapy with venetoclax, bendamustine and
rituximab for six cycles (1 cycle = 28 days). There will be an interim analysis after 19
patients are enrolled to evaluate for tumor lysis syndrome (TLS). TLS is caused by the
fast breakdown of cancer cells which can lead to electrolyte and kidney problems.
Tumor assessments will be performed after Cycle 3-4 and at end of induction therapy.
Mandatory pre-treatment tumor tissue sample (i.e., obtained in the course of standard
biopsy or surgery) will be required for research (if sufficient tissue is available).
Mandatory bone marrow aspirate (obtained in the course of standard biopsy) and peripheral
blood sample will be collected at the end of treatment for Minimal Residual Disease
(MRD). MRD measures the disease remaining after treatment. Optional peripheral blood
samples will also be collected for future research.
10/11/2021: Due to slower than anticipated enrollment, the study was redesigned to
reflect the current historical complete response rate and with a lowered sample size for
prompt primary endpoint readout.
Lead OrganizationPrECOG, LLC