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Trial Title:
A Clinical Trial in Adults With Non-Hodgkin Lymphoma (NHL), With a Particular Emphasis on Cutaneous T Cell Lymphoma (CTCL), Testing the Safety and Activity of a Novel Drug to Inhibit a Protein Called Tumor Necrosis Factor Receptor 2 That Drives Both Lymphoma Growth and Escape of the Immune System
NCT ID:
NCT06385522
Condition:
NHL
Cutaneous T Cell Lymphoma
Peripheral T-cell Lymphoma
Conditions: Official terms:
Lymphoma
Lymphoma, Non-Hodgkin
Lymphoma, T-Cell
Lymphoma, T-Cell, Peripheral
Lymphoma, T-Cell, Cutaneous
Study type:
Interventional
Study phase:
Phase 1
Overall status:
Not yet recruiting
Study design:
Allocation:
N/A
Intervention model:
Sequential Assignment
Primary purpose:
Treatment
Masking:
None (Open Label)
Intervention:
Intervention type:
Biological
Intervention name:
BITR2101
Description:
TNFR2 monoclonal antibody
Arm group label:
BITR2101
Summary:
The goal of this trial is to learn if a new drug, BITR2101, works to treat non-Hodgkin
lymphoma (NHL) in adults, with CTCL patients being sought in particular. The trial also
seeks to learn about the safety of this drug. This drug is a protein called an antibody.
The drug prevents a molecule called a receptor, named TNFR2, from being made. TNFR2
regulates the immune system and provides important signals to lymphoma cells to grow,
make more of themselves and survive. When the drug prevents TNFR2 from being produced in
lymphoma cells from CTCL patients, those cells died in the laboratory. Therefore, the
trial seeks to enroll CTCL patients in particular, in addition to other subtypes of NHL.
When the drug prevents the receptor from being made in certain immune cells, there is
increased immune activity. Thus, the trial will test if this drug is a new immune therapy
that helps the immune system to keep lymphoma under control. In particular, we want to
find out if the amount of lymphoma in the body decreases while taking the drug. Patients
with autoimmune diseases are not permitted because of this potential increase in immunity
brought on by this drug. Patients should have NHL that has been previously treated, that
is getting worse on their current therapy, and their doctors think a new treatment is
needed. All patients will receive BITR2101 by a 3 hour infusion into a vein,
periodically, initially every 3 weeks. There is no placebo in this trial. Visits to the
clinic facility will be required, initially at least every week and later less
frequently. Patients will be expected to report changes in their health to the clinic
staff including new findings and any change in the status of their lymphoma they may be
aware of. Patients can continue to receive BITR2101 for up to a year or until their
lymphoma worsens. For patients who are clearly benefiting, they may be able to receive
BITR2101 for another year.
Criteria for eligibility:
Criteria:
Key Inclusion Criteria:
- Histologically confirmed relapsed or refractory B cell NHL (DLBCL, MCL, MZL), PTCL
or CTCL (MF or SS subtype) as per 2017 World Health Organization classification
after at least 2 prior lines of systemic therapy and have received, or are not
eligible for, approved or available treatments expected to provide benefit. CTCL
patients should be Stage ≥1B through 4 and Stage 1A (see Appendix 1) with plaque
disease without treatment options, in which case the patient should be discussed
with the sponsor after submitting documentation of disease stage and treatment
history. Patients with indolent lymphoid malignancies (CTCL, MZL) must need new
treatment regimen in the opinion of the treating Investigator.
- Age ≥18 years.
- Life expectancy ≥3 months.
- Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group (ECOG) Performance Status of 0 or 1.
Key Exclusion Criteria:
- Patients with prior exposure (up to 12 months) to PD-1/PD-L1 therapies.
- Known hypersensitivity to any excipients that are used in the BITR2101 formulation
as noted in Investigator Brochure.
- Autoimmune diseases that have been sufficiently active to require medications in the
3 months before screening, except autoimmune endocrinopathies, such as
hypothyroidism, that are stable with hormone-replacement therapy. Including
inflammatory diseases such as arthritis, colitis, liver fibrosis, cirrhosis,
interstitial fibrosis or chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). The SRC may
allow patients with well controlled arthritis or COPD in the expansion cohort if
there is no indication of inflammatory disease flare and no blood cytokine evidence
of a systemic inflammatory response in the 3 months prior to enrollment.
- Serious illness or concomitant non-oncological disease considered by the
investigator to be incompatible with participating in the protocol.
- History or evidence of clinically significant cardiovascular disease.
- Severe dyspnea, pulmonary dysfunction, or need for continuous supportive oxygen
inhalation.
- Concurrent enrollment in another clinical study, unless it is an observational
(non-interventional) clinical study for the duration of this study or the FU period
of an interventional study.
- Prior or current anticancer therapy, including chemotherapy, hormonal therapy, or
radiotherapy within 4 weeks of the first BITR2101 administration.
- Continuous corticosteroid use exceeding 10 mg/day prednisone or equivalent.
Other protocol defined Inclusion/Exclusion criteria may apply
Gender:
All
Minimum age:
18 Years
Maximum age:
N/A
Healthy volunteers:
No
Start date:
August 2024
Completion date:
February 2027
Lead sponsor:
Agency:
Boston Immune Technologies and Therapeutics
Agency class:
Industry
Source:
Boston Immune Technologies and Therapeutics
Record processing date:
ClinicalTrials.gov processed this data on November 12, 2024
Source: ClinicalTrials.gov page:
https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT06385522