Study on Tailored Treatment in Elderly Patients With Newly Diagnosed Primary Lymphoma of Central Nervous System

Study Purpose

Primary central nervous system lymphomas are rare aggressive malignancies, usually treated in two steps: an induction phase (where a combination of chemotherapy is given) followed by a consolidation phase (where patients usually receive one of the following: whole-brain irradiation, chemotherapy supported by autologous stem-cell transplantation, other type of chemotherapy, or are just observed). The feasibility of this overall strategy, for several reasons, is limited in elderly patients . This study involves patients aged ≥70 years. The more fit patients will receive the standard chemotherapy combination (high-dose methotrexate, procarbazine and rituximab) as induction. Responding patients will receive either procarbazine or lenalidomide as maintenance therapy; the aim is to evaluate the efficacy of these two drugs. The more fragile patients will receive a less aggressive therapy consisting of concomitant whole-brain radiotherapy, temozolomide and rituximab as induction therapy, followed by temozolomide as maintenance treatment; the aim is to evaluate the efficacy of this combination of treatment.

Recruitment Criteria

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Healthy volunteers are participants who do not have a disease or condition, or related conditions or symptoms

No
Study Type

An interventional clinical study is where participants are assigned to receive one or more interventions (or no intervention) so that researchers can evaluate the effects of the interventions on biomedical or health-related outcomes.


An observational clinical study is where participants identified as belonging to study groups are assessed for biomedical or health outcomes.


Searching Both is inclusive of interventional and observational studies.

Interventional
Eligible Ages 70 Years and Over
Gender All
More Inclusion & Exclusion Criteria

Inclusion Criteria:

  • - Histologically or cytologically assessed diagnosis of CD20+ diffuse large B-cell lymphoma.
  • - Diagnostic sample obtained by stereotactic or surgical biopsy, CSF cytology examination or vitrectomy.
  • - Lymphoma exclusively localized in the central nervous system (brain parenchyma and/or meningeal/CSF dissemination and/or eyes and/or cranial nerves).
  • - Previously untreated patients (previous or ongoing steroid therapy admitted).
  • - Age ≥70 years.
  • - Patients not eligible for high-dose chemotherapy supported by autologous stem cell transplant.
  • - ECOG PS ≤3.
  • - Adequate bone marrow, cardiac, renal, and hepatic function.
  • - No previous or concurrent malignancies with the exception of surgically cured carcinoma in-situ of the cervix, carcinoma of the skin or other cancers without evidence of disease at least for 3 years (patients with a previous lymphoma at any time are NOT eligible).
  • - Absence of any familial, sociological or geographical condition potentially hampering compliance with the study protocol and follow-up schedule.
  • - No concurrent treatment with other experimental drugs.
  • - Patients receiving oral lenalidomide or procarbazine must agree to avoid sharing the study medication with another person and to return all unused study drug to the investigator.
  • - Male patients must agree to always use a latex or synthetic condom during any sexual contact with females of reproductive potential while taking lenalidomide, during dose interruptions and for up to 7 days after treatment discontinuation, even if they have undergone a successful vasectomy.
  • - Informed consent from the patient, or legal representative, obtained before registration.

Exclusion Criteria:

  • - Lymphoma entity other than diffuse large B-cell lymphoma.
  • - Extra-CNS disease.
  • - Lymphoma exclusively localized in the eyes.
  • - Lymphoma infiltration of the cranial nerves as exclusive site of disease.
  • - Previous antineoplastic treatment for the PCNSL.
  • - Patients eligible for ASCT.
  • - HBsAg- and HCV-positive patients; HBsAg- and HCV-positive patients.
HBcAb+ is not exclusion criteria in the absence of detectable levels HBVDNA.
  • - HIV disease or immunodeficiency.
  • - Severe concomitant illnesses/medical conditions (e.g. impaired respiratory and/or cardiac function, uncontrolled diabetes mellitus despite optimal medical management).
  • - Active infectious disease.
- Hypersensitivity to any active principle and/or any excipient according to the contraindications reported in the Summary of Product Characteristics (SmPCs) of the anticancer drugs used in the study

Trial Details

Trial ID:

This trial id was obtained from ClinicalTrials.gov, a service of the U.S. National Institutes of Health, providing information on publicly and privately supported clinical studies of human participants with locations in all 50 States and in 196 countries.

NCT03495960
Phase

Phase 1: Studies that emphasize safety and how the drug is metabolized and excreted in humans.

Phase 2: Studies that gather preliminary data on effectiveness (whether the drug works in people who have a certain disease or condition) and additional safety data.

Phase 3: Studies that gather more information about safety and effectiveness by studying different populations and different dosages and by using the drug in combination with other drugs.

Phase 4: Studies occurring after FDA has approved a drug for marketing, efficacy, or optimal use.

Phase 2
Lead Sponsor

The sponsor is the organization or person who oversees the clinical study and is responsible for analyzing the study data.

International Extranodal Lymphoma Study Group (IELSG)
Principal Investigator

The person who is responsible for the scientific and technical direction of the entire clinical study.

Andrès JM Ferreri, MD
Principal Investigator Affiliation IRCCS San Raffaele Scientific Institute, Milan, Italy
Agency Class

Category of organization(s) involved as sponsor (and collaborator) supporting the trial.

Other
Overall Status Recruiting
Countries Denmark, Finland, Israel, Italy, Switzerland
Conditions

The disease, disorder, syndrome, illness, or injury that is being studied.

Primary Central Nervous System Lymphoma
Additional Details

Primary central nervous system lymphomas (PCNSL) are rare aggressive malignancies, mostly of B-cell origin, representing 4% of intracranial neoplasms and 4-6% of extranodal non-Hodgkin's lymphomas (NHL). Despite improvements in treatment, PCNSL is associated with an aggressive course and unsatisfactory outcome. The median age at diagnosis is 61 years and age over 60 years has been reported to be an independent factor for a poorer outcome. The modern treatment of PCNSL includes two phases: induction and consolidation. The induction phase usually consists of a polychemotherapy combination, including high-dose methotrexate as a critical drug, while there are at least four different strategies that can be used as consolidation: whole-brain irradiation, myeloblative chemotherapy supported by autologous stem-cell transplantation, non-myeloblative chemotherapy, observation (only in patients who achieve complete remission after induction). The feasibility of this overall strategy is limited, for several reasons, in elderly patients with newly diagnosed PCNSL. High-doses of antimetabolite-based chemotherapy, the standard induction for patients younger than 70 years, is often not feasible in elderly patients. Among maintenance strategies, simple observation results in unacceptably high relapse rate and associated mortality while whole-brain irradiation and aggressive chemotherapies are associated with unacceptable toxicity and poor outcome. Thus, new strategies aimed at obtaining durable responses with an acceptable tolerability and reduced risk of neurocognitive decline are needed and these strategies should be tailored not only based on the patients' age but also on their specific co-morbidities and general health conditions. For the present trial, all patients aged ≥70 years taken into care at the participating sites will be invited to participate and after informed consent signature their baseline data will be collected in the trial database, including data of patients resulting in screening failure. This will allow to verify any potential screening bias by comparing the characteristics of included and excluded patients. Patients fulfilling the eligibility criteria are then screened for their suitability to receive a more or less aggressive anticancer treatment and assigned to two different treatment strategies accordingly. Part A: The more fit patients are assigned to the trial Part A and will receive the standard combination of high-dose methotrexate, procarbazine and rituximab as induction. Responding patients will subsequently be randomized to receive either procarbazine or lenalidomide as maintenance therapy. Procarbazine is a lipophilic oral alkylating agent, easily crossing the blood brain barrier (up to 100% of plasma levels). There is no known cumulative toxicity for procarbazine and it is therefore currently in use as a viable maintenance treatment option aimed at eliminating residual lymphoma cells in the CNS and reduce the risk of relapse. Lenalidomide is an oral immunomodulatory agent, active against diffuse large B cell lymphoma, the most common category in PCNSL, which can be taken for years, showing an excellent safety profile. On this background, the Part A of the present trial consists of a randomized phase II trial conducted in elderly patients with newly diagnosed PCNSL responsive to high-dose methotrexate-based chemotherapy, comparing two different maintenance strategies: the oral chemotherapeutic drug procarbazine and the oral immunomodulatory agent lenalidomide. Part B: The more fragile patients are assigned to the trial Part B and will receive a less aggressive therapy consisting of concomitant whole-brain radiotherapy, temozolomide and rituximab as induction therapy, followed by temozolomide single-agent as maintenance treatment. Whole-brain radiotherapy is the main therapeutic choice for patients with contraindications to chemotherapy and in particular for elderly patients. Brain irradiation is usually associated with transient disruption of the blood-tumor barrier, occurring from 1 week after the initiation of radiotherapy to 1 month after its completion, during which pharmaceutical agents have maximum access to tumor tissue. Concomitant delivery of active cytostatics, therefore, could result in increased tumor uptake. Concomitant delivery of radiotherapy and temozolomide is currently used as standard approach for the treatment of high-grade gliomas, with acceptable toxicity despite the use of a larger irradiation dose. Based on the above, in the Part B of the present trial, temozolomide and rituximab, two agents active against PCNSL, are delivered concomitantly to whole-brain radiotherapy to obtain a synergistic effect of radiation damage, antineoplastic effect of rituximab and cytostatic and radiomimetic effects of temozolomide. Finally, temozolomide maintenance has shown to be beneficial regarding sustained remission after initial response to induction therapy and its suitability to improve disease control in responding patients not fit for more aggressive therapies will therefore be tested in the Part B of this trial.

Arms & Interventions

Arms

Experimental: Lenalidomide (experimental arm of part A)

Patients in part A will receive 2 courses of induction chemo-immunotherapy: Rituximab 375 mg/m2 i.v. on days -6, 1, 15, 29; Methotrexate 3 g/m2 0.5 g/m2 in 15 min. +2.5 g/m2 in 3-hr inf. on days 2,16,30; Procarbazine 60 mg/m2/d oral on days 2 to 11. The duration of each treatment course is 43 days. Patients will then be randomized to receive lenalidomide or procarbazine as maintenance therapy. Lenalidomide is given 25 mg/d per os, days 1 to 21 every 4 weeks for 24 courses

Active Comparator: Procarbazine (comparator arm of part A)

Patients in part A will receive 2 courses of induction chemo-immunotherapy: Rituximab 375 mg/m2 i.v. on days -6, 1, 15, 29; Methotrexate 3 g/m2 0.5 g/m2 in 15 min. +2.5 g/m2 in 3-hr inf. on days 2,16,30; Procarbazine 60 mg/m2/d oral on days 2 to 11. The duration of each treatment course is 43 days. Patients will then be randomized to receive lenalidomide or procarbazine as maintenance therapy. Procarbazine is given 100 mg/d per os, days 1 to 5 every 4 weeks for 6 courses

Other: Radiotherapy, temozolomide and rituximab (single arm part B)

Patients ineligible for high-dose-methotrexate will be treated in the single-arm phase II part B of the trial and will receive whole-brain radiotherapy (2340 cGy in 5 weekly fractions) temozolomide 75 mg/m2/d during radiotherapy 4 weekly doses of rituximab 375 mg/m2, starting on day 2 of the whole-brain radiotherapy. Patients will then receive maintenance therapy with 12 courses of temozolomide administered on days 1-5, every 4 weeks at a dose of 150 mg/m2/d at the first course, and of 200 mg/m2/d at the subsequent courses.

Interventions

Drug: - Rituximab

PART A - INDUCTION PHASE During the primary chemo-immunotherapy (PRIMAIN regimen, 2 courses; every 43 days) administered as induction in the PART A of the study, Rituximab is given 375 mg/m2 as standard infusion at days -6, 1, 15 & 29. Rituximab on day -6 will be delivered only during the first course; it will be delivered between day -6 and day 0 according to clinical requirements and patient's conditions. Some patients would need for a fast chemotherapy starting. PART B - INDUCTION PHASE Patients ineligible for high-dose methotrexate, will be assigned to receive concomitant whole brain radiotherapy-temozolomide-rituximab (Induction Part B). Rituximab is given 375 mg/m2 in 4 weekly doses, starting on day 2 of radiotherapy.

Drug: - Methotrexate

During the primary chemo-immunotherapy (PRIMAIN regimen, 2 courses; every 43 days) administered as induction in the PART A of the study, Methotrexate is given 3 g/m2 as infusion (0.5 g/m2 in 15 min. + 2.5 g/m2 in 3-hr infusion) on days 2, 16 & 30

Drug: - Procarbazine

PART A - INDUCTION PHASE During the primary chemo-immunotherapy (PRIMAIN regimen, 2 courses; every 43 days) administered as induction in the PART A of the study, Procarbazine is given oral 60 mg/m2/d from days 2 to 11 PART A - MANTEINANCE PHASE (control arm) Patients responsive or with stable disease after two courses of PRIMAIN regimen (the induction treatment) will be randomly allocated to receive two different maintenance therapies. Maintenance will start on day 60 of the 2nd PRIMAIN course. Procarbazine represents the control arm and is given oral 100 mg/d from day 1 to 5 for 6 courses, every 4 weeks.

Drug: - Lenalidomide

Patients responsive or with stable disease after two courses of PRIMAIN regimen (the induction treatment) will be randomly allocated to receive two different maintenance therapies. Maintenance will start on day 60 of the 2nd PRIMAIN course. Lenalidomide represents the experimental arm and is given oral 25 mg/d from day 1 to 21 for 24 courses; every 4 weeks.

Radiation: - Radiotherapy

Patients ineligible for high-dose methotrexate, will be assigned to receive concomitant whole brain radiotherapy-temozolomide-rituximab (Induction Part B). Whole-brain will be irradiated by two opposite lateral fields including the first two cervical vertebras and the posterior two thirds of the eyes. Photons of 4 - 10 MeV, 180 - 200 cGy per day, 5 weekly fractions will be employed

Drug: - Temozolomide

PART B - INDUCTION PHASE Patients ineligible for high-dose methotrexate, will be assigned to receive concomitant whole brain radiotherapy-temozolomide-rituximab (Induction Part B). Temoyolomide is given 75 mg/m2/d, every day for the whole duration of radiotherapy. PART B - MAINTENANCE PHASE Temozolomide is also given as maintenance in Part B. The treatment consists of 12 courses where temozolomide is administered on days 1-5, every 4 weeks at a dose of 150 mg/m2/d at the first course, and of 200 mg/m2/d at the subsequent courses,

Contact a Trial Team

If you are interested in learning more about this trial, find the trial site nearest to your location and contact the site coordinator via email or phone. We also strongly recommend that you consult with your healthcare provider about the trials that may interest you and refer to our terms of service below.

International Sites

Aarhus University Hospital, Aarhus, Denmark

Status

Recruiting

Address

Aarhus University Hospital

Aarhus, ,

Site Contact

Michael Thorsgaard, MD

micthors@rm.dk

+41 58 666 7321

Odense University Hospital, Odense, Denmark

Status

Recruiting

Address

Odense University Hospital

Odense, ,

Site Contact

Thomas Stauffer Larsen, MD

ielsg@ior.usi.ch

+41 58 666 7321

Oulu University Hospital, Oulu, Finland

Status

Recruiting

Address

Oulu University Hospital

Oulu, ,

Site Contact

Outi Kuittinen, MD

outi.kuittinen@ppshp.fi

+41 58 666 7321

Tampere University Hospital, Tampere, Finland

Status

Recruiting

Address

Tampere University Hospital

Tampere, ,

Site Contact

Marjukka Pollari, MD

ielsg@ior.usi.ch

+41 58 666 7321

Tel Aviv Sourasky Medical Center, Tel Aviv, Israel

Status

Withdrawn

Address

Tel Aviv Sourasky Medical Center

Tel Aviv, ,

Centro di Riferimento Oncologico, Aviano, (pn), Italy

Status

Recruiting

Address

Centro di Riferimento Oncologico

Aviano, (pn), 33081

Site Contact

Michele Spina, MD

ielsg@ior.usi.ch

+41 58 666 7321

Ospedale C.e G. Mazzoni, Ascoli Piceno, Italy

Status

Recruiting

Address

Ospedale C.e G. Mazzoni

Ascoli Piceno, ,

Site Contact

Piero Galieni, MD

ielsg@ior.usi.ch

+41 58 666 7321

Bari IRCCS Istituto Tumori, Bari, Italy

Status

Recruiting

Address

Bari IRCCS Istituto Tumori

Bari, ,

Site Contact

Attilio Guarini

ielsg@ior.usi.ch

+41 58 666 7321

ASST Spedali Civili di Brescia, Brescia, Italy

Status

Recruiting

Address

ASST Spedali Civili di Brescia

Brescia, ,

Site Contact

Alessandra Tucci, MD

ielsg@ior.usi.ch

+41 58 666 7321

Ospedale Antonio Perrino, Brindisi, Italy

Status

Recruiting

Address

Ospedale Antonio Perrino

Brindisi, ,

Site Contact

Domenico Pastore, MD

ielsg@ior.usi.ch

+41 58 666 7321

Firenze, Italy

Status

Recruiting

Address

Azienda Ospedaliera Universitaria (AOU) Careggi

Firenze, ,

Site Contact

Luca Nassi, MD

ielsg@ior.usi.ch

+41 58 666 7321

Meldola, Italy

Status

Recruiting

Address

Meldola, IRST - ISTITUTO SCIENTIFICO ROMAGNOLO PER LO STUDIO E LA CURA DEI TUMORI

Meldola, ,

Milano, IRCCS Ospedale San Raffaele, Milan, Italy

Status

Recruiting

Address

Milano, IRCCS Ospedale San Raffaele

Milan, , 20132

Site Contact

Andrès Ferreri, MD

ielsg@ior.usi.ch

+41 58 666 7321

Milano - Îstituto Besta, Milan, Italy

Status

Recruiting

Address

Milano - Îstituto Besta

Milan, ,

Milano Niguarda, Milan, Italy

Status

Recruiting

Address

Milano Niguarda

Milan, ,

Modena, Policlinico Universitario, Modena, Italy

Status

Recruiting

Address

Modena, Policlinico Universitario

Modena, ,

ASST Monza - Ospedale S. Gerardo, Monza, Italy

Status

Recruiting

Address

ASST Monza - Ospedale S. Gerardo

Monza, ,

Site Contact

Luisa Verga, MD

ielsg@ior.usi.ch

+41 58 666 7321

Pescara, Italy

Status

Recruiting

Address

Pescara, Presidio Ospedaliero UOS dipartimentale centro di diagnosi e terapia Linfomi

Pescara, ,

Site Contact

Elsa Pennese, MD

ielsg@ior.usi.ch

+41 58 666 7321

Piacenza, Piacenza, Italy

Status

Recruiting

Address

Piacenza

Piacenza, ,

Ravenna - Ospedale di Ravenna - IRST, Ravenna, Italy

Status

Recruiting

Address

Ravenna - Ospedale di Ravenna - IRST

Ravenna, ,

Reggio Emilia, Italy

Status

Recruiting

Address

Reggio Emilia - Arcispedale Santa Maria Nuova - IRCCS

Reggio Emilia, ,

Rimini, Italy

Status

Recruiting

Address

AUSL della Romagna - Presidio Ospedaliero Rimini - Ospedale "Infermi"

Rimini, ,

Site Contact

Anna Merli, MD

ielsg@ior.usi.ch

+41 58 666 7321

Roma, Italy

Status

Recruiting

Address

Policlinico Umberto I - Università La Sapienza

Roma, ,

Site Contact

Maurizio Martelli, MD

ielsg@ior.usi.ch

+41 58 666 7321

Roma - Unicampus-Bio, Roma, Italy

Status

Recruiting

Address

Roma - Unicampus-Bio

Roma, ,

San Giovanni Rotondo, Italy

Status

Recruiting

Address

S. Giovanni Rotondo - Casa Sollievo della sofferenza

San Giovanni Rotondo, ,

Siena, Italy

Status

Recruiting

Address

Siena - Azienda Ospedaliera Universitaria Senese

Siena, ,

Terni - Ospedale di Terni, Terni, Italy

Status

Recruiting

Address

Terni - Ospedale di Terni

Terni, ,

Torino, Italy

Status

Recruiting

Address

Torino neurooncologia - AOU CITTA' DELLA SALUTE E DELLA SCIENZA DI TORINO

Torino, ,

Tricase - Ospedale "Card. G. Panico", Tricase, Italy

Status

Recruiting

Address

Tricase - Ospedale "Card. G. Panico"

Tricase, ,

Udine, Azienda Ospedaliera Universitaria, Udine, Italy

Status

Recruiting

Address

Udine, Azienda Ospedaliera Universitaria

Udine, ,

Site Contact

Jacopo Olivieri

ielsg@ior.usi.ch

+41 58 666 7321

Basel - Universitätsspital, Basel, Switzerland

Status

Recruiting

Address

Basel - Universitätsspital

Basel, ,

Site Contact

Benjamin kasenda, MD

ielsg@ior.usi.ch

+41 58 666 7321

Bellinzona, Switzerland

Status

Recruiting

Address

IOSI - Oncology Institute of Southern Switzerland

Bellinzona, , 6500

Bern - Inselspital, Bern, Switzerland

Status

Recruiting

Address

Bern - Inselspital

Bern, ,

St. Gallen - Kantonsspital, Saint Gallen, Switzerland

Status

Recruiting

Address

St. Gallen - Kantonsspital

Saint Gallen, ,

Universitätsspital Zürich, Zürich, Switzerland

Status

Recruiting

Address

Universitätsspital Zürich

Zürich, , CH-8091

Site Contact

Stefan Balabanov, MD

stefan.balabanov@usz.ch

+41 58 666 7321

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