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RECRUITING
NCT06193759
PHASE1

Immunotherapy for Malignant Pediatric Brain Tumors Employing Adoptive Cellular Therapy (IMPACT)

Sponsor: Children's National Research Institute

View on ClinicalTrials.gov

Summary

This is an open-label phase 1 safety and feasibility study that will employ multi-tumor antigen specific cytotoxic T lymphocytes (TSA-T) directed against proteogenomically determined personalized tumor-specific antigens (TSA) derived from a patient's primary brain tumor tissues. Young patients with embryonal central nervous system (CNS) malignancies typically are unable to receive irradiation due to significant adverse effects and are treated with intensive chemotherapy followed by autologous stem cell rescue; however, despite intensive therapy, many of these patients relapse. In this study, individualized TSA-T cells will be generated against proteogenomically determined tumor-specific antigens after standard of care treatment in children less than 5 years of age with embryonal brain tumors. Correlative biological studies will measure clinical anti-tumor, immunological and biomarker effects.

Key Details

Gender

All

Age Range

1 Year - 30 Years

Study Type

INTERVENTIONAL

Enrollment

12

Start Date

2024-09-20

Completion Date

2032-12-29

Last Updated

2026-03-10

Healthy Volunteers

No

Interventions

BIOLOGICAL

Multi-tumor antigen specific cytotoxic T lymphocytes (TSA-T) directed against proteogenomically determined personalized tumor-specific antigens (TSA)

Participants in this study will receive TSA-T after completion of standard-of-care treatment.

DRUG

Group A Standard-of-Care Backbone Therapy

Patients will undergo surgical resection, then be treated with standard-of-care therapy as required, which may include up to 3 induction chemotherapy cycles (vincristine, cyclophosphamide, cisplatin, etoposide with or without methotrexate) and up to 3 consolidation cycles (carboplatin and thiotepa, each followed by an infusion of autologous peripheral blood stem cells).

RADIATION

Group B Salvage Backbone Therapy

Patients will undergo surgical re-resection - aiming for gross total resection when feasible - followed by re-irradiation. Re-irradiation may be delivered as a conventional fractionated course, hypofractionated stereotactic radiotherapy, or proton therapy.

Locations (1)

Children's National Hospital

Washington D.C., District of Columbia, United States