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Evaluation of Fluoxetine and Cytotoxic Lysosomal Stress in Glioma (FLIRT)
Sponsor: Duke University
Summary
The purpose of this research study is to determine if fluoxetine increases lysosomal stress in patients with recurrent IDHwt glioma by evaluating LAMP1 expression in tumor samples obtained pre-resection via biopsy and during surgery. Lysosomes are organelles (structures in cells) that contain digestive enzymes (substances that break down chemicals) that help keep the cells free of extra or worn out cell parts. Fluoxetine, a drug approved by the FDA to treat problems like depression and anxiety, can cause changes to structures in cells called lysosomes that then improve how well the chemotherapy drug temozolomide (TMZ) kills cancer cells in the brain.
Official title: A Randomized Surgical Window of Opportunity Study With Dose Escalation to Evaluate Whether Oral Fluoxetine Can Induce Cytotoxic Lysosomal Stress and Enhance Temozolomide Efficacy in Clinical Glioma
Key Details
Gender
All
Age Range
24 Years - Any
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Enrollment
10
Start Date
2023-08-05
Completion Date
2027-06-05
Last Updated
2025-09-22
Healthy Volunteers
No
Interventions
Fluoxetine
Patients randomized to the experimental arm will receive fluoxetine 20mg/day for 5 days before escalation to a maintenance dose at day 6. On day 6, patients will start treatment with 50 mg/m2 TMZ daily for 7 days (Days 6-12) * Arm 2A (n=10) - Escalate to maintenance 40mg/day fluoxetine on day 6 * Arm 2B (n=10) - This arm will be opened as long as there are less than 3/10 dose limiting toxicities in Arm 2A. Patients will escalate to maintenance 60mg/day fluoxetine on day 6
Temozolomide
Patients randomized to the control arm will receive 50 mg/m2 temozolomide daily for 7 days (Days 1-7), followed by resection or biopsy 21 days after initiation of the temozolomide cycle.
Locations (4)
UC San Diego Moores Cancer Center
San Diego, California, United States
Stanford Cancer Institute
Stanford, California, United States
NYU Langone Health
New York, New York, United States
The Preston Robert Tisch Brain Tumor Center at Duke University
Durham, North Carolina, United States