Gene Therapy in Treating Patients With Human Immunodeficiency Virus-Related Lymphoma Receiving Stem Cell Transplant
Study looking at stem cell gene therapy to treat patients with HIV and lymphoma
a study on HIV/AIDS Lymphoma Non-Hodgkin Lymphoma Hodgkin's Lymphoma Mantle Cell Lymphoma Bone Marrow Transplant Immunodeficiency Stem Cell Transplant Transplants T Cell Lymphoma
Summary
- Eligibility
- for people ages 18 years and up (full criteria)
- Location
- at Sacramento, California and other locations
- Dates
- study startedcompletion around
Description
Summary
This phase I/II trial studies the side effects and best dose of gene therapy in treating patients with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-related lymphoma that did not respond to therapy or came back after an original response receiving stem cell transplant. In gene therapy, small stretches of deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) called "anti-HIV genes" are introduced into the stem cells in the laboratory to make the gene therapy product used in this study. The type of anti-HIV genes and therapy in this study may make the patient's immune cells more resistant to HIV-1 and prevent new immune cells from getting infected with HIV-1.
Official Title
A Phase I Study of Stem Cell Gene Therapy for HIV Mediated by Lentivector Transduced, Pre-Selected CD34+ Cells
Details
PRIMARY OBJECTIVE:
- Safety, defined as timely engraftment (the collective establishment of a persistent absolute neutrophil count of at least 500 cells/mm3 and platelet count of 20,000 cells/mm3 without transfusion for 3 consecutive measurements of laboratory values obtained on different days) by one month post-transplant, in the absence of any grade 3 and 4 non-hematopoietic organ toxicity that can be attributed (possibly, probably, or definitely) to lentiviral transduced stem cell transplant, excluding alopecia, or any clonal expansion and excluding expected toxicities that are associated with the pre-transplant conditioning regimen.
SECONDARY OBJECTIVES:
- To determine efficacy of the candidate product, defined as establishment of > 5% mononuclear blood cells expressing anti-HIV genes in the peripheral blood at 3 months post-transplant.
II. To determine the presence, quantity, and duration of gene modified HIV-1 resistant peripheral blood cells and gut mucosal immune cells.
III. To study the integration sites of vector sequences in circulating cells. IV. To study progression-free survival. V. To study overall survival. VI. To study complete response rate and duration. VII. To study partial response rate and duration. VIII. To study time to neutrophil engraftment (first measurement of 3 consecutive laboratory values on different days) of absolute neutrophil count [ANC] >= 500 cells/mm3).
IX. To study time to platelet engraftment (first measurement of 3 consecutive measurements laboratory values obtained on different days) of platelets >= 20,000 cells/mm3 without platelet transfusions 7 days prior).
- To study hematologic function at day 100 (ANC > 1500, hemoglobin [Hb] > 10 g/dl without transfusion and platelets > 100,000) XI. To study CD4 recovery at the conclusion of the trial. XII. To study safety in terms of toxicities, infections, transfusions, and infusion-related reactions.
XIII. To study HIV-1 viral load over time. XIV. To study persistence of vector-transduced cells over time.
EXPLORATORY OBJECTIVE:
- To evaluate the presence and the magnitude of expansion of HIV-1 resistant immune cells in the peripheral blood and gut mucosa of transplanted participants, subsequent to withholding anti-retroviral therapy (ART).
OUTLINE: This is a dose-escalation study of lentivirus vector CCR5 shRNA/TRIM5alpha/TAR decoy-transduced autologous CD34-positive hematopoietic progenitor cells.
Patients receive BEAM or BEAM-R regimen administered as standard of care comprising carmustine on day -6, cytarabine twice daily (BID) on days -5 to -2, etoposide BID on days -5 to -2, and melphalan on day -1. Patients with B-cell lymphoma also receive rituximab on day -6 before chemotherapy and on days 21 and 28 post-transplant as standard of care. Patients undergo intravenous (IV) infusion of lentivirus vector CCR5 shRNA/TRIM5alpha/TAR decoy-transduced autologous CD34-positive hematopoietic progenitor cells over 1 hour.
After completion of study treatment, patients are followed up at days 7, 14, 21, 28, 42, 60, 90, 120, 180, 240, 300, 360, 420, 480, 520, 600, 660, and 720, and then yearly for at least 15 years.
Keywords
HIV Infection, Mature T-Cell and NK-Cell Non-Hodgkin Lymphoma, Plasmablastic Lymphoma, Recurrent Adult Hodgkin Lymphoma, Recurrent Adult Non-Hodgkin Lymphoma, Recurrent Burkitt Lymphoma, Recurrent Follicular Lymphoma, Stage III Follicular Lymphoma, Stage III Mantle Cell Lymphoma, Stage IV Follicular Lymphoma, Stage IV Mantle Cell Lymphoma, Burkitt Lymphoma, Lymphoma, Follicular Lymphoma, Non-Hodgkin Lymphoma, Hodgkin Disease, Mantle-Cell Lymphoma, T-Cell Lymphoma, Lymphoma, Large-Cell, Immunoblastic, Recurrence, Cytarabine, Etoposide, Podophyllotoxin, Etoposide phosphate, Melphalan, Mechlorethamine, Carmustine, Nitrogen Mustard Compounds, Autologous Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation, Laboratory Biomarker Analysis, Lentivirus Vector CCR5 shRNA/TRIM5alpha/TAR Decoy-transduced Autologous CD34-positive Hematopoietic Progenitor Cells, Peripheral Blood Stem Cell Transplantation
Eligibility
You can join if…
Open to people ages 18 years and up
- Inclusion criteria associated with type and status of lymphoma, one of the following must be applicable:
- Biopsy-proven intermediate or high-grade non-Hodgkin's lymphoma, meeting one of the following criteria (timeline 8 months prior to enrollment in the screening segment):
- In partial remission,
- Relapsed after initial complete remission,
- Failed induction therapy, but responds to salvage therapy (i.e., chemosensitive disease),
- In complete remission with high-risk features as specified by the International Prognostic Index.
- Biopsy-proven advanced stage follicular lymphoma, that have failed at least two lines of therapy multi-agent chemotherapy, but responds to salvage therapy i.e.,chemosensitive disease) (timeline 8 months prior to enrollment in the screening segment).
- Biopsy-proven advanced stage Mantle cell lymphoma with Ki-67 > 10% in first complete remission (timeline 8 months prior to enrollment in the screening segment).
- Biopsy-proven Hodgkin's lymphoma, meeting one of the following criteria (timeline 8 months prior to enrollment).
- In first, or greater relapse after initial complete remission,
- In partial remission,
- Failed induction therapy, but responds to salvage therapy (i.e., chemosensitive disease).
- Biopsy-proven Burkitt's lymphoma, meeting one of the following criteria (timeline 8 months prior to enrollment):
- In second complete remission after relapse following initial complete remission,
- Failed induction therapy, but responds (very good partial remission, complete remission, or near complete remission) to salvage therapy (i.e., chemosensitive disease).
- Biopsy proven plasmablastic lymphomas, or peripheral T cell lymphoma (with the exception of ALK+ type in first or second complete remission) *NOTE: Patients meeting the following criteria are exempt from the 8-month timeline and do not require additional biopsy:
- Patients who have never achieved a complete remission on the last biopsy-proven site of disease and went on to the next therapy then achieved a complete remission.
- Patients who relapsed quickly (within 3 months of their last chemotherapy) and now have achieved a complete remission with salvage therapy.
- Biopsy-proven intermediate or high-grade non-Hodgkin's lymphoma, meeting one of the following criteria (timeline 8 months prior to enrollment in the screening segment):
- Inclusion criteria associated with HIV-1 status
- HIV-1 infection, as documented by any federally approved, licensed HIV rapid test performed in conjunction with screening (or ELISA, test kit, and confirmed by Western blot or other approved test). Alternatively, this documentation may include a record demonstrating that another physician has documented the participant's HIV status based on either: 1) approved diagnostic tests, or 2) the referring physician's written record that HIV infection was documented, with supporting information on the participant's relevant medical history and/or current management of HIV infection.
- Must be on a multi-drug anti-HIV regimen (excluding zidovudine [AZT, ZDV, Retrovir®, or agents containing zidovudine (e.g., Combivir® and Trizivir®)], and efavirenz [Sustiva®, or agents containing efavirenz (e.g., Atripla®)]).
Participants on zidovudine [AZT, ZDV, Retrovir®; including Combivir® and Trizivir®] and efavirenz [Sustiva®; including Atripla®] must switch to an alternative regimen without anticipated drug-drug interactions or myelosuppressive properties based on known viral resistance patterns and/or ART history, such as raltegravir and Truvada (emtricitabine and tenofovir) at least two weeks prior to the transplant.
o Participant taking ARTs must satisfy one of the following:
- Undetectable HIV viral load (< 50 copies/mL). For patients who have had negative viral loads in the past 6 months and no known HIV viral load >500 copies/mL within the last 6 months, minor fluctuations of viral load (isolated escalations up to 500 copies/mL) are acceptable. The participant's history of negative viral loads may be documented with recent laboratory results and/or a record from the participant's HIV care provider.
- If viral load is detectable at < 2000 copies/mL a review of previous antiretroviral regimens or previous genotypic or phenotypic testing which indicate the ability to fully suppress virus by addition of sensitive drugs must be performed. This review will be carried out by the protocol ID team or the ID specialist caring for the patient.
- If viral load is detectable at ≥ 2000 copies/mL, a current HIV genotype and/or phenotype must be obtained. If a HAART regimen to which the patient's virus is sensitive can be determined based on genotype and previous antiretroviral experience, then the patient will be considered eligible in this regard. This review will be carried out by the protocol ID team or the ID specialist caring for the patient.
General Inclusion Criteria (timeline: within 8 weeks prior to enrollment in the screening segment, unless otherwise specified)
- Karnofsky performance status of 70-100%. ECOG performance status <2
- SGOT and SGPT ≤ 2.5 times upper limit of normal (ULN). Serum bilirubin ≤ 2.5 times ULN except for participants who are on atazanavir or indinavir, or with elevated indirect bilirubin related to bilirubin conjugation issues such as Gilbert's disease, provided that the participant's direct bilirubin is within normal institutional limits.
- Participants who are hepatitis C virus antibody positive, or hepatitis B virus surface antigen positive must be free of clinical evidence of cirrhosis as determined by the principal investigator in consultation with the institutional Gastroenterology Service.
- Participants with Hepatitis B should be on appropriate anti-viral therapy at the time of the transplant, and their viral load should be negative.
- Serum creatinine ≤ 2 times ULN.
- Creatinine clearance ≥ 60 mL/min by the modified Cockcroft-Gault Formula.
- PT/PTT ≤ 2 times upper limit of normal (ULN), or international normalized ratio (INR)/PTT ≤ 2 times the ULN.
- FEV-1 or DLCO (corrected for hemoglobin) ≥ 50% predicted.
- LVEF ≥ 50% by 2D ECHO or MUGA scan.
- Not pregnant or nursing, with negative serum pregnancy test. Pregnant women are excluded from this study because the conditioning regimen has the potential for teratogenic or abortifacient effects. Because there is an unknown but potential risk for adverse events in nursing infants secondary to treatment of the mother with BEAM, breastfeeding should be discontinued. These potential risks may also apply to other agents used in this study.
- Participants should agree to practice effective contraceptive precautions and to use at least one method of contraception for the duration of the study and for 3 months post-transplant.
- Age ≥18 years. Because only adult transplant centers are participating as study sites.
- Life expectancy of greater than 3 months.
- Ability to understand and the willingness to sign a written informed consent document.
- Receipt of a stable ART regimen for at least 3 weeks prior to enrollment.
You CAN'T join if...
Participants who do not fulfill the criteria as listed above, are ineligible. Additionally, the presence of any of the following conditions will exclude a participant from study enrollment (timeline for all the exclusion criteria is within 8 weeks prior to enrollment in the screening segment):
- Participants with > 5% involvement of bone marrow by malignant cells (either by manual count or flow cytometry) prior to stem cell collection.
- Participants with any abnormal cytogenetics in the bone marrow not related to the lymphoma, and not deemed to be constitutional.
- Participants with unexplained anemia and/or thrombocytopenia.
- Participants with clear evidence of myeloproliferative disorders, or myelodysplastic disorders in the marrow.
- Presence of any active CNS disease at the time of evaluation (parenchymal or leptomeningeal).
- Any history of HIV-1 associated encephalopathy.
- Participants with persistently low CD4 counts less than 200 and a history of any AIDS-defining infection in the last 6 months before screening are excluded from the study.
- Symptomatic/active bacterial, or fungal, or any other opportunistic infection.
- Active CMV retinitis, or other active CMV-related organ dysfunction.
- Relapse of pneumocystis carinii pneumonia within the past year before enrollment.
- Intractable, severe diarrhea, defined as > 1.500 cc diarrheal fluid per day, or diarrhea causing persistent severe electrolyte abnormalities, or hypoalbuminemia.
- History of active myocardial ischemia, cardiomyopathy, uncontrolled dysrhythmia, or congestive heart failure within the last 6 months before enrollment.
- Dementia of any kind.
- Seizures within the past 12 months before enrollment.
- History of Grade III hemorrhagic cystitis due to prior cyclophosphamide chemotherapy.
- History of other prior malignancy, except squamous cell carcinoma of the cervix or anus, superficial basal cell or squamous cell skin cancer, or other malignancy curatively treated more than 5 years ago before enrollment.
- Active psychosocial condition that would hinder study compliance and follow-up.
- Any perceived inability to directly (and without the means of a legal guardian) provide informed consent.
- Any medical or physical contraindication, or other inability to undergo HPC collection.
- Participants who are receiving any other investigational agents.
- Uncontrolled intercurrent illness including, but not limited to, ongoing or active infection, symptomatic congestive heart failure, unstable angina pectoris, cardiac arrhythmia, or psychiatric illness/social situations that would limit compliance with study requirements.
Locations
- University of California Davis Comprehensive Cancer Center
Sacramento California 95817 United States - UCSF Medical Center-Parnassus
San Francisco California 94115 United States - UC San Diego Moores Cancer Center
La Jolla California 92093 United States - Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center
New York New York 10065 United States
Details
- Status
- accepting new patients
- Start Date
- Completion Date
- (estimated)
- Sponsor
- AIDS Malignancy Consortium
- Links
- Sign up for this study
- ID
- NCT02797470
- Phase
- Phase 1/2 research study
- Study Type
- Interventional
- Participants
- About 11 people participating
- Last Updated
Please contact me about this study
We will not share your information with anyone other than the team in charge of this study, which might include an external sponsor. Submitting your contact information does not obligate you to participate in research.
Thank you!
The study team should get back to you in a few business days.