Study #2024-0303
GCC1949: Phase 2 trial of indoximod with chemotherapy and radiation for children with progressive brain tumors or newly diagnosed DIPG
MD Anderson Study Status
Enrolling
Treatment Agent
Indoximod, Temozolomide, Cyclophosphamide, Etoposide, Lomustine
Description
Indoximod was developed to inhibit the IDO (indoleamine 2,3-dioxygenase) enzymatic pathway, which is important in the natural regulation of immune responses. This potent immune suppressive mechanism has been implicated in regulating immune responses in settings as diverse as infection, tissue/organ transplant, autoimmunity, and cancer. By inhibiting the IDO pathway, we hypothesize that indoximod will improve antitumor immune responses and thereby slow the growth of tumors. The central clinical hypothesis for the GCC1949 study is that inhibiting the pivotal IDO pathway by adding indoximod immunotherapy during chemotherapy and/or radiation is a potent approach for breaking immune tolerance to pediatric tumors that will improve outcomes, relative to standard therapy alone. This is an NCI-funded (R01 CA229646, MPI: Johnson and Munn) open-label phase 2 trial using indoximod-based combination chemo-radio-immunotherapy for treatment of patients age 3 to 21 years who have progressive brain cancer (glioblastoma, medulloblastoma, or ependymoma), or newly-diagnosed diffuse intrinsic pontine glioma (DIPG). Statistical analysis will stratify patients based on whether their treatment plan includes up-front radiation (or proton) therapy in combination with indoximod. Central review of tissue diagnosis from prior surgery is required, except non-biopsied DIPG. This study will use the "immune-adapted Response Assessment for Neuro-Oncology" (iRANO) criteria for measurement of outcomes. Planned enrollment is up to 140 patients.
Resources and Links
Phone Number: 1-877-MDA-6789
Information and next steps
Disease:
Glioblastoma, Medulloblastoma, Ependymoma, Diffuse Intrinsic Pontine Glioma
Study phase:
Phase II
Physician name:
Gregory Friedman
Department:
Pediatrics
For general questions about clinical trials:
1-855-939-4993
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