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Alvespimycin Hydrochloride in Treating Patients With Metastatic or Unresectable Solid Tumors

Sponsored by National Cancer Institute (NCI)

About this trial

Last updated 12 years ago

Study ID

NCI-2012-01455

Status

Completed

Type

Interventional

Phase

Phase 1

Placebo

No

Accepting

18-75 Years
18+ Years
All
All

Not accepting

Not accepting
Healthy Volunteers

Trial Timing

Started 21 years ago

What is this trial about?

This phase I trial is studying the side effects and best dose of alvespimycin hydrochloride in treating patients with metastatic or unresectable solid tumors. Drugs used in chemotherapy, such as alvespimycin hydrochloride, work in different ways to stop tumor cells from dividing so they stop growing or die.

What are the participation requirements?

Yes

Inclusion Criteria

- Histologically confirmed solid tumor, including, but not limited to, the following:

- Prostate
- Breast
- Ovary
- Colon
- Kidney
- Head and neck
- Stomach
- Melanoma

- Metastatic or unresectable disease

- No standard curative or palliative therapy exists or is no longer effective

- Progressive disease as indicated by the following:

- Non-prostate cancer
- New lesions or increase in pre-existing lesions on bone scintigraphy, CT scan, MRI, or by physical examination
- No increase in biochemical markers (e.g., carcinoembryonic antigen or CA-15-3) or symptoms as sole evidence of disease progression
- Prostate cancer
- Must have castrate metastatic disease (i.e., disease progression after castration or treatment with a gonadotropin-releasing hormone [GnRH] analog)
- Patients who have not undergone surgical orchiectomy must continue with medical therapy (i.e., GnRH analogs) to maintain castrate levels of serum testosterone < 50 ng/dL
- Patients who received an antiandrogen as part of first-line hormonal therapy must show disease progression after discontinuing treatment
- Progressive metastatic disease on imaging studies (e.g., bone scan, CT scan, or MRI) OR metastatic disease and a rising prostate-specific antigen (PSA) allowed
- Biochemical progression is defined as a minimum of 3 rising PSA values from baseline obtained at least 1 week apart OR 2 rising PSA values obtained more than 1 month apart, with >= 25% increase in value

- No active brain metastases

- Hormone receptor status:

- Not specified

- Male or female

- Performance status - Karnofsky 70-100%

- Performance status - ECOG 0-1

- More than 6 months

- WBC >= 3, 000/mm^3

- Absolute neutrophil count >= 1, 500/mm^3

- Platelet count >= 100,000/mm^3

- Bilirubin =< 1.5 times upper limit of normal (ULN)

- AST and ALT < 1.5 times ULN

- PT normal

- Creatinine =< 1.4 mg/dL

- Creatinine clearance > 55 mL/min

- QTc < 450 msec for male patients (470 msec for female patients)

- LVEF > 40% by MUGA

- No history of serious ventricular arrhythmia (i.e., ventricular tachycardia or ventricular fibrillation >= 3 beats in a row)

- No myocardial infarction within the past year

- No active ischemic heart disease within the past year

- No New York Heart Association class III or IV congestive heart failure

- No congenital long QT syndrome

- No left bundle branch block

- No poorly controlled angina

- No history of uncontrolled dysrhythmias or requiring antiarrhythmic drugs

- Calcium blockers and beta blockers allowed

- No other significant cardiac disease

- Oxygen saturation > 88%

- Dyspnea < grade 2 at rest on room air

- No clinically significant pulmonary comorbidity (e.g., severe chronic obstructive pulmonary disease)

- No requirement for supplemental oxygen

- Not pregnant or nursing

- Negative pregnancy test

- Fertile patients must use effective contraception

- No active or ongoing infection

- No symptomatic peripheral neuropathy >= grade 2

- No psychiatric illness or social situation that would preclude study compliance

- No other uncontrolled illness

- More than 4 weeks since prior chemotherapy (6 weeks for mitomycin and nitrosoureas)

- At least 1 week since prior ketoconazole

- More than 4 weeks since prior radiotherapy

- Recovered from all prior therapy

- More than 4 weeks since prior investigational anticancer therapeutic drugs

- No concurrent combination antiretroviral therapy for HIV-positive patients

- No concurrent administration of any of the following herbal remedies:

- Hydrastis canadensis (goldenseal)
- Hypericum perforatum (St. John's wort)
- Uncaria tomentosa (cat's claw)
- Echinacea angustifolia roots
- Trifolium pratense (wild cherry)
- Matricaria chamomilla (chamomile)
- Glycyrrhiza glabra (licorice)
- Dillapiol
- Hypericin
- Naringenin

- No other concurrent investigational agents

- No other concurrent anticancer agents or therapies

Locations

Location

Status