Guest guest Posted August 27, 2006 Report Share Posted August 27, 2006 BlankA Pilot Study of Fractionated Dose Subcutaneous Rituximab (RTX, Rituxan® (Registered Trademark)) in Patients With Refractory or Relapsed Chronic Lymphocytic Leukemia This study is currently recruiting patients. Verified by National Institutes of Health Clinical Center (CC) August 2006 Purpose Chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) originates from a malignant B cell clone. Treatment of CLL includes chemotherapy, monoclonal antibody therapy, bone marrow transplantation and/or watchful waiting/supportive care (treatment of infection, blood product substitution). Chemotherapy-based regimens using fludarabine are currently considered the standard treatment for CLL. These chemotherapy regimens can achieve an overall response rate as high as 60 to 80 percent; however, chemotherapy alone is never curative and relapse always occurs. Once fludarabine failure occurs, other second line chemotherapy regimens have only modest responses. Moreover, repeated chemotherapy bears an increased risk of myelosuppression resulting in a higher frequency of serious infections in this already immunocompromised and mostly elderly patient group. Rituximab is FDA approved for the treatment of relapsed or refractory low grade or follicular CD20+ B cell non Hodgkin's lymphoma (375 mg/m2 IV infusion once weekly for 4 or 8 doses). Recently, rituximab (anti CD20) has been introduced to CLL treatment regimens and has become an attractive choice in combination chemotherapy or as single agent treatment. Rituximab has been shown to be effective at lower doses than 375 mg/m2 when given more frequently. Several theoretical considerations and supporting laboratory evidence suggest that a fractionated dosing schedule using low-dose rituximab could be more effective than the current i.v. schedule of high-dose rituximab. Main limitations of high dose i.v. rituximab include the exhaustion of complement components and the occurrence of a shaving reaction by which CD20 is pulled of the surface of the CLL cells. Both of these mechanisms can reduce or cancel the efficacy of rituximab. Indeed, preliminary clinical evidence suggests that low-dose rituximab at 20mg/m2 i.v. 3-times per week can lead to steady clearance of leukemic cells without inducing substantial loss of targeted CD20. More extended periods of rituximab treatment, e.g. 8-12 weeks, rather than the approved 4 week regimen, may be more effective to allow increased clearance of leukemic cells. Therefore, we propose this pilot, Phase I/II , single agent study which will evaluate the safety and feasibility of subcutaneous rituximab (Rituxan) administered at 20 mg/day three times a week for 12 weeks in subjects with CLL. Patients need to have had prior treatment with fludarabine, and have an elevated absolute lymphocyte count. The primary objective will be to test the safety and feasibility of giving rituximab subcutaneously. We will also obtain as a secondary endpoint an early estimate of efficacy as evidenced by (a) shrinkage of lymphadenopathy and/or ( improvement in blood values and bone marrow biopsy findings. Condition Intervention Phase Refractory Chronic Lymphocytic Leukemia Drug: Rituximab Phase I Phase II Study Type: Interventional Study Design: Treatment Official Title: A Pilot Study of Fractionated Dose Subcutaneous Rituximab (RTX, Rituxan® (Registered Trademark)) in Patients With Refractory or Relapsed Chronic Lymphocytic Leukemia Further study details as provided by National Institutes of Health Clinical Center (CC): Expected Total Enrollment: 12 Study start: August 2006 Last follow-up: August 2006; Data entry closure: August 2006 Chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) originates from a malignant B cell clone. Treatment of CLL includes chemotherapy, monoclonal antibody therapy, bone marrow transplantation and/or watchful waiting/supportive care (treatment of infection, blood product substitution). Chemotherapy-based regimens using fludarabine are currently considered the standard treatment for CLL. These chemotherapy regimens can achieve an overall response rate as high as 60 to 80 percent; however, chemotherapy alone is never curative and relapse always occurs. Once fludarabine failure occurs, other second line chemotherapy regimens have only modest responses. Moreover, repeated chemotherapy bears an increased risk of myelosuppression resulting in a higher frequency of serious infections in this already immunocompromised and mostly elderly patient group. Rituximab is FDA approved for the treatment of relapsed or refractory low grade or follicular CD20+ B cell non Hodgkin's lymphoma (375 mg/m2 IV infusion once weekly for 4 or 8 doses). Recently, rituximab (anti CD20) has been introduced to CLL treatment regimens and has become an attractive choice in combination chemotherapy or as single agent treatment. Rituximab has been shown to be effective at lower doses than 375 mg/m2 when given more frequently. Several theoretical considerations and supporting laboratory evidence suggest that a fractionated dosing schedule using low-dose rituximab could be more effective than the current i.v. schedule of high-dose rituximab. Main limitations of high dose i.v. rituximab include the exhaustion of complement components and the occurrence of a shaving reaction by which CD20 is pulled of the surface of the CLL cells. Both of these mechanisms can reduce or cancel the efficacy of rituximab. Indeed, preliminary clinical evidence suggests that low-dose rituximab at 20mg/m2 i.v. 3-times per week can lead to steady clearance of leukemic cells without inducing substantial loss of targeted CD20. More extended periods of rituximab treatment, e.g. 8-12 weeks, rather than the approved 4 week regimen, may be more effective to allow increased clearance of leukemic cells. Therefore, we propose this pilot, Phase I/II , single agent study which will evaluate the safety and feasibility of subcutaneous rituximab (Rituxan) administered at 20 mg/day three times a week for 12 weeks in subjects with CLL. Patients need to have had prior treatment with fludarabine, and have an elevated absolute lymphocyte count. The primary objective will be to test the safety and feasibility of giving rituximab subcutaneously. We will also obtain as a secondary endpoint an early estimate of efficacy as evidenced by (a) shrinkage of lymphadenopathy and/or ( improvement in blood values and bone marrow biopsy findings. Eligibility Ages Eligible for Study: 21 Years and above, Genders Eligible for Study: Both Criteria a.. INCLUSION CRITERIA b.. Patients diagnosed with Chronic Lymphocytic Leukemia c.. Prior therapy with fludarabine or a fludarabine containing regimen d.. CD20 expression on CLL cells e.. Neutrophil count ANC greater than 500/mm(3) f.. Platelet count greater than 30K/mm(3) g.. Absolute lymphocyte count of greater than 10,000/uL h.. Age 21-99 EXCLUSION CRITERIA a.. Bulky lymphadenopathy, defined as greater than 1 lymph node with greater than 5cm in largest diameter b.. Evidence for transformation into high grade lymphoma (Richter's transformation) c.. ECOG performance 3 or higher d.. Other concurrent anticancer therapies e.. Less than 3 months from last systemic therapy for CLL f.. Less than 6 months from last monoclonal antibody therapy g.. More than one prior treatment course with rituximab, either as single agent or in a combination chemotherapy regimen. h.. Chronic or current clinically significant infection, including HIV positivity or hepatitis C i.. Moribund status or concurrent hepatic, renal, cardiac, neurologic, pulmonary, infectious, or metabolic disease of such severity that it would preclude the patient's ability to tolerate protocol therapy j.. History of mucocutaneous reactions (paraneoplastic pemphigus, s- syndrome, lichenoid dermatitis, vesiculobullous dermatitis, and toxic epidermal necrolysis) k.. Known anaphylaxis or IgE mediated hypersensitivity to murine proteins or to any component of this product. l.. Inability to self inject the study medication or to have it administered by a third person. m.. Inability to understand the investigational nature of the study ability to provide informed consent Location and Contact Information Please refer to this study by ClinicalTrials.gov identifier NCT00366418 Patient Recruitment and Public Liaison Office (800) 411-1222 prpl@... TTY 1-866-411-1010 land National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute (NHLBI), Bethesda, land, 20892, United States; Recruiting More Information NIH Clinical Center Detailed Web Page Publications de Vinuesa CG, Cook MC, Ball J, Drew M, Sunners Y, Cascalho M, Wabl M, Klaus GG, MacLennan IC. Germinal centers without T cells. J Exp Med. 2000 Feb 7;191(3):485-94. Study ID Numbers: 060228; 06-H-0228 Last Updated: August 23, 2006 Record first received: August 17, 2006 ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT00366418 Health Authority: United States: Federal Government ClinicalTrials.gov processed this record on 2006-08-25 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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