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DETERMINE Trial Treatment Arm 03: Entrectinib in Adult, Paediatric and Teenage/Young Adult Patients With ROS1 Gene Fusion-Positive Cancers.
Sponsor: Cancer Research UK
Summary
This clinical trial is looking at a drug called entrectinib. Entrectinib is approved as standard of care treatment for adult patients with non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) which have a particular molecular alteration called ROS1-positive, and patients 12 years old or above with solid tumours which have another type of change in the cancer cells. This means it has gone through clinical trials and been approved by the Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency (MHRA) in the UK. Investigators now wish to find out if it will be useful in treating patients with other cancer types which have the same molecular alteration (ROS1-positive). If the results are positive, the study team will work with the NHS and the Cancer Drugs Fund to see if these drugs can be routinely accessed for patients in the future. This trial is part of a trial programme called DETERMINE. The programme will also look at other anti-cancer drugs in the same way, through matching the drug to rare cancer types or ones with specific mutations.
Official title: DETERMINE (Determining Extended Therapeutic Indications for Existing Drugs in Rare Molecularly Defined Indications Using a National Evaluation Platform Trial): An Umbrella-Basket Platform Trial to Evaluate the Efficacy of Targeted Therapies in Rare Adult, Paediatric and Teenage/Young Adult (TYA) Cancers With Actionable Genomic Alterations, Including Common Cancers With Rare Actionable Alterations. Treatment Arm 03: Entrectinib in Adult, Paediatric and Teenage/Young Adult Patients With ROS1 Gene Fusion-Positive Cancers.
Key Details
Gender
All
Age Range
Any - Any
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Enrollment
30
Start Date
2025-11-30
Completion Date
2029-10
Last Updated
2025-11-24
Healthy Volunteers
No
Conditions
Interventions
Entrectinib
Adult and paediatric patients with body surface area (BSA) ≥1.51 m\^2 will receive entrectinib orally at a dose of 600 mg daily dose (three 200 mg capsules per day). Paediatric patients with BSA \<1.51 m\^2 will receive entrectinib at a dose of 100 mg (BSA=0.43-0.50 m\^2) or 200 mg (BSA=0.51-0.80 m\^2) or 300 mg (BSA=0.81-1.10 m\^2) or 400 mg (BSA=1.11-1.50 m\^2). Each cycle of treatment will consist of 28 days and patients may continue until disease progression without clinical benefit, unacceptable AEs or withdrawal of consent.
Locations (27)
Belfast City Hospital
Belfast, United Kingdom
University Hospital Birmingham
Birmingham, United Kingdom
Birmingham Children's Hospital
Birmingham, United Kingdom
Bristol Royal Hospital for Children
Bristol, United Kingdom
Bristol Haematology and Oncology Centre
Bristol, United Kingdom
Addenbrooke's Hospital
Cambridge, United Kingdom
Velindre Cancer Centre
Cardiff, United Kingdom
Cardiff Children's Hospital
Cardiff, United Kingdom
Western General Hospital
Edinburgh, United Kingdom
The Beatson Hospital
Glasgow, United Kingdom
Royal Hospital for Children Glasgow
Glasgow, United Kingdom
Leicester Royal Infirmary
Leicester, United Kingdom
Alder Hey Hospital
Liverpool, United Kingdom
University College London Hospital
London, United Kingdom
Guy's Hospital
London, United Kingdom
Great Ormond Street Hospital
London, United Kingdom
Royal Manchester Children's Hospital
Manchester, United Kingdom
The Christie Hospital
Manchester, United Kingdom
Clatterbridge Cancer Centre
Metropolitan Borough of Wirral, United Kingdom
Great North Children's Hospital
Newcastle, United Kingdom
Freeman Hospital
Newcastle, United Kingdom
Churchill Hospital
Oxford, United Kingdom
John Radcliffe Hospital
Oxford, United Kingdom
Weston Park Hospital
Sheffield, United Kingdom
Sheffield's Children's Hospital
Sheffield, United Kingdom
Southampton General Hospital
Southampton, United Kingdom
The Royal Marsden Hospital
Sutton, United Kingdom