Background:
- Chronic Graft Versus Host Disease (cGVHD) can occur after a person has had a stem cell
or bone marrow transplant. In cGVHD, the donor cells attack the recipient's body.
Researchers want to see if a drug called ibrutinib can block one of the proteins that
lead to the immune reaction that causes cGVHD.
Objective:
- To see if ibrutinib as a first-line treatment can help people with newly diagnosed
cGVHD.
Eligibility:
- People age 18 and older with newly diagnosed moderate or severe cGVHD
Design:
- Participants will be screened with:
- Medical and medicine histories
- Physical exam and vital signs
- Electrocardiograms (to measure heart function)
- Assessment of their ability to perform daily activities
- Blood and urine tests
- Assessment of their general well-being.
- Participants will visit the Clinical Center every 2 weeks for the first 2 months.
Then they will visit every 4 weeks.
- Participants will take ibrutinib by mouth once every day of every cycle. One cycle
is 28 days. Treatment will last up to 2 years. Participants will keep a medicine
diary.
- Participants will take tests to measure lung function. They may have computed
tomography scans of their chest. They will complete questionnaires about their
symptoms and how cGVHD is affecting their body and quality of life. They will repeat
the screening tests.
- Participants may have optional blood tests and/or skin biopsies to better understand
the drugs effect on the body.
- Participants will be contacted by phone 30 days after treatment ends. They will also
be contacted once a year for 2 years to discuss how they are feeling and if they
have taken any other medicines to treat cGVHD.
Study sponsor and potential other locations can be found on ClinicalTrials.gov for NCT04294641.
Background:
- Chronic graft-versus-host disease (GvHD) is the leading cause of late morbidity and
non-relapse mortality following allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation
(alloHSCT), occurring in 40-60% long-term survivors.
- Chronic GvHD occurs due to the dysfunctional peripheral tolerance during
post-transplant hematopoietic reconstitution that allows the development and
persistence of alloreactive donor-derived T and B cells.
- Prednisone is the front-line therapy; however, about 50% of participants have
steroid-refractory disease and there is no standard second-line therapy.
- The most attractive approach for controlling chronic GvHD would be early therapy
intervention which could prevent the most severe and irreversible clinical
manifestations.
- Anti-B-cell therapy delivered early in chronic GvHD could be effective and
steroid-sparing.
- Ibrutinib, reversible small molecule inhibitor of Brutons tyrosine kinase, has been
shown to be well-tolerated and effective in phase 1b/2 trial for steroid refractory
chronic GvHD.
Objective:
-To evaluate efficacy of ibrutinib as a first-line treatment for persons with newly
diagnosed chronic GvHD by measuring the overall response rate (complete response [CR] +
partial response [PR]) at 6 months, according to the 2014 National Institutes of Health
(NIH) Consensus Criteria
Eligibility:
- Newly diagnosed, moderate or severe chronic GvHD according to the 2014 NIH Consensus
Criteria, requiring systemic immunosuppression
- Age greater than or equal to 18 years old
- Karnofsky performance status greater than or equal to 60%
- History of prior alloHSCT; any donors, conditioning regimens and graft sources are
allowed
- Adequate cardiac, hepatic and other organ function
- Adequate laboratory parameters
Design:
- Multi-center, non-randomized, phase II study
- Two-stage design will be used to determine the overall response rate (CR + PR) at 6
months
- Continuous daily dose of ibrutinib 420 mg by mouth, with the potential for dose
reductions to 280 mg and 140 mg
- The accrual ceiling will be set at 40 participants, allowing for a total of up to 28
evaluable subjects.
Lead OrganizationNational Cancer Institute
Principal InvestigatorSteven Zivko Pavletic