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Adoptive Transfer of Autologous T Cells Targeted to Prostate Specific Membrane Antigen (PSMA) for the Treatment of Castrate Metastatic Prostate Cancer (CMPC)
Sponsor: Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center
Summary
This is a phase I study which will test the safety of different doses of the patients own immune cells which have been changed to help recognize and destroy the cancer cells. The investigators want to find out what effects, good and/or bad, it has on the body and on the prostate cancer. The immune cells (T cells) used in this study will be the patients own immune cells. They will be removed from the patients blood, changed in the laboratory, and then put back into their body. T cells help the body fight infections. These cells may also kill cancer cells in some cases. Right now the patients T cells are unable to kill the cancer cells. For this reason, the physician will change the T cells by putting in a gene so that they may be able to better recognize and kill the prostate cancer cells. A gene is a portion of information which comes from the DNA and tells the cell what to do. This gene will be put into the patients T cells by a weakened virus. It is hoped that this approach will help the T cells recognize the prostate cancer tumor cells and possibly kill them. The investigators have found that T cells modified in this way were able to cure a cancer similar to Chronic Lymphocytic Leukemia in mice. However, this is an entirely new treatment for prostate cancer and it is not known if it will have any beneficial or unexpected harmful effects.
Key Details
Gender
MALE
Age Range
18 Years - Any
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Enrollment
13
Start Date
2010-06
Completion Date
2026-06
Last Updated
2026-01-15
Healthy Volunteers
No
Conditions
Interventions
engineered autologous T cells
Three cohorts of patients each will receive escalating doses of transduced autologous chimeric T lymphocytes at 1 x 10\^7 CAR+ T cells/kg, 3 x 10\^7 CAR+ T cells/kg, and 1 x 108 CAR+ T cells/kg, respectively. One patient will be initially added to the three already enrolled in cohort 1 using a new variant vector expressing the P28z CAR, and up to three patients may be added to each cohort, for a total of up to six each, in the case of Grade 3 toxicity and/or sub-optimal imaging. A 4th cohort of three patients may be added if an anti-PSMA effect is observed either immunologically or radiographically or if there is preferential targeting of the cells at a particular dose level. The dose level of the 4th cohort would be from a previously tested dose level. All patients will receive one dose of cyclophosphamide (Cy) at 300mg/m2 iv one day prior to infusion of T cells.
cyclophosphamide
Three cohorts of patients each will receive escalating doses of transduced autologous chimeric T lymphocytes at 1 x 10\^7 CAR+ T cells/kg, 3 x 10\^7 CAR+ T cells/kg, and 1 x 10\^8 CAR+ T cells/kg, respectively. One patient will be initially added to the three already enrolled in cohort 1 using a new variant vector expressing the P28z CAR, and up to three patients may be added to each cohort, for a total of up to six each, in the case of Grade 3 toxicity and/or sub-optimal imaging. A 4th cohort of three patients may be added if an anti-PSMA effect is observed either immunologically or radiographically or if there is preferential targeting of the cells at a particular dose level. The dose level of the 4th cohort would be from a previously tested dose level. All patients will receive one dose of cyclophosphamide (Cy) at 300mg/m2 iv one day prior to infusion of T cells.
Locations (1)
Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center
New York, New York, United States