This phase Ib trial studies the safety and side effects of a second infusion of axicabtagene ciloleucel (Axi-Cel) in treating patients with high-risk non-Hodgkin lymphoma that has come back after a period of improvement (relapsed) or does not respond to treatment (refractory). Axi-Cel is made using a patient's own blood cells. Immune cells called T cells are collected from the blood and are genetically modified in a manufacturing facility to recognize a CD19 marker on the cancer cells. In the manufacturing facility, a virus (called a retroviral vector) is used to put the CD19 chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) gene into the T cells. The modified T cells, now called Axi-Cel, may find the cancer cells with the CD19 receptor on them and kill them. Giving a second dose of Axi-Cel in a short amount of time (7-14 days) may be able to increase the time that the CD19 CAR T cells remain in the body, increasing their ability to kill cancer cells over a longer period of time.
Additional locations may be listed on ClinicalTrials.gov for NCT05794958.
Locations matching your search criteria
United States
California
Palo Alto
Stanford Cancer Institute Palo AltoStatus: Active
Contact: Saurabh Dahiya
Phone: 650-452-8155
PRIMARY OBJECTIVE:
I. Assess the safety of a second infusion of axicabtagene ciloleucel (Axi-Cel-2) administered within 7-14 days of administration of standard of care infusion of Axi-Cel in adults with relapsed and/or refractory high-risk non-Hodgkin lymphoma (large B-cell lymphoma [LBCL]).
SECONDARY OBJECTIVE:
I. Evaluate efficacy of Axi-Cel-2 in adults with high risk relapsed/refractory LBCL.
EXPLORATORY OBJECTIVES:
I. Assess the safety and clinical benefit of Axi-Cel-2 with the following:
Ia. Incidence of adverse events;
Ib. Objective response rate (complete response [CR] + partial response [PR]) as determined by National Comprehensive Cancer Network [NCCN] Guidelines version (v)1.2017 B-cell lymphomas;
Ic. Duration of response (DOR);
Id. Best CR rate as determined by NCCN Guidelines v1.2017;
Ie. Number of durable CR at month 6;
If. Median overall survival (OS);
Ig. Median progression free survival (PFS);
Ih. Median event free survival (EFS).
II. Measure the chimeric antigen receptor chimeric antigen T cell therapy (CART) expansion (area under the curve), CART persistence (quantitative polymerase chain reaction [qPCR] quantification), and phenotype (CAR-flow cytometry assays [FACS] analysis) of Axi-Cel in peripheral blood (PB), after each dose.
III. Evaluate the incidence of target antigen loss (CD19+) at tumor progression.
IV. Assess the level of circulating tumor deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) (ctDNA) or minimal residual disease (MRD) analysis (ClonoSEQ testing).
V. Describe changes in imaging biomarkers (tumor metabolic volume, standardized uptake value maximum [SUVmax], total lesion glycolysis.)
OUTLINE:
Patients undergo standard of care (SOC) leukapheresis and receive SOC lymphodepletion chemotherapy with recommended cyclophosphamide intravenously (IV) and fludarabine IV on days -5 to -3, followed by SOC axicabtagene ciloleucel IV on day 0. Patients then receive a second dose of axicabtagene ciloleucel IV between day 7 and 14. Patients also undergo echocardiogram (ECHO) and brain magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) during screening and positron emission tomography-computed tomography (PET-CT) or CT and collection of blood samples throughout the trial. Patients may also undergo a tumor biopsy throughout the trial as clinically indicated.
After completion of study treatment, patients are followed up on days 21 and 28, and months 2, 3, 6, 9 and 12 and then annually up to 15 years for long term gene therapy follow-up.
Lead OrganizationStanford Cancer Institute Palo Alto
Principal InvestigatorSaurabh Dahiya