Recruitment

Recruitment Status
Not yet recruiting
Estimated Enrollment
Same as current

Summary

Conditions
  • Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome
  • COVID-19
  • Cytokine Storm
Type
Interventional
Phase
Phase 1Phase 2
Design
Allocation: N/AIntervention Model: Single Group AssignmentIntervention Model Description: Sequential assignmentMasking: None (Open Label)Primary Purpose: Treatment

Participation Requirements

Age
Between 18 years and 100 years
Gender
Both males and females

Description

Background and Proposed Research Importance Coronavirus disease 2019 is an infectious disease caused by severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2. COVID-19 causes life threatening complications known as Cytokine Release Syndrome or Cytokine Storm and Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome. These ...

Background and Proposed Research Importance Coronavirus disease 2019 is an infectious disease caused by severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2. COVID-19 causes life threatening complications known as Cytokine Release Syndrome or Cytokine Storm and Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome. These complications are the main causes of death in this global pandemic. Over 1000 clinical trials are on-going worldwide to diagnose, treat, and improve the aggressive clinical course of COVID-19. The investigators propose the first, and so far, only gene therapy solution that has the potential to address this urgent unmet medical need. Rationale There are striking similarities between the damaged lung environment of COVID-19 induced ARDS and the tumor microenvironment (exposed collagen from tissue destruction by invading tumor or by the virus-induced immune response, and presence of activated proliferative cells (cancer cells and tumor associated fibroblasts or activated T cells, macrophages and pulmonary fibroblasts in COVID-19); DeltaRex-G is a disease-seeking retrovector encoding a cytocidal dominant negative human cyclin G1 as genetic payload. The DeltaRex-G nanoparticles has a navigational system that targets exposed collagenous proteins in injured tissues, thus increasing the effective drug concentration at the sites of injury, in the vicinity of activated/proliferative T cells evoked by COVID-19. The DeltaRex-G then enters the rapidly dividing T cells and kills them by arresting the G1cell division cycle, hence, reducing cytokine release; Intravenous DeltaRex-G has minimal systemic toxicity due to its disease-seeking properties that limits the biodistribution of DeltaRex-G only to areas of injury where exposed collagenous proteins are abnormally found; and DeltaRex-G is currently available in FDA approved "Right to Try" or Expanded Access Program for Stage 4 cancers for an intermediate size population. To gain this approval, FDA requires DeltaRex-G to have demonstrated safety and efficacy in early clinical trials. Study Design This is a dose-seeking phase 1/2 study using escalating doses of DeltaRex-G given intravenously for 7 days in a hospital setting, with a randomization schema at the MTD. The study will include up to three cohorts with increasing DeltaRex-G doses as shown below. The study will employ the standard "Cohort of Three" design (Storer, 1989). Three patients are treated at each dose level with expansion to six patients per cohort if DLT is observed in one of the three initially enrolled patients at each dose level. If no DLT occurs in 3 patients, escalation to the next dose level will be permitted. The maximum tolerated dose is defined as the highest safely tolerated dose, where not more than one patient experienced DLT, with the next higher dose level having at least two patients who experienced DLT. No intra-patient dose escalation will take place. Patients within the same cohort of 3 will be treated in a staggered manner, i.e., the next subject will receive the product only after the previous subject has completed administration of all doses and has been evaluated on Day 14 (or one week after last DeltaRex-G infusion) to assess safety. At the MTD, after 3 subjects in same cohort have been evaluated with no DLT, subjects in the same cohort may be treated simultaneously. Patients who do not complete the 7-day treatment will be replaced except if patient developed DLT. Randomization Schema: At the highest dose level or when MTD is determined, nine (9) additional patients will be randomized to the treatment arm + standard of care (SOC) vs. standard of care alone (n = 6 patients DeltaRex-G and 3 SOC in each group). Patients will be matched according to symptomatology (e.g. SpO2 >94% at the time of screening), age (within 10 years or at least less than or greater than 65 years), race (black vs non-black), and gender. Dose of DeltaRex-G: Escalating doses of DeltaRex-G i.v daily for 7 days: Number of Pts. Dose Level Dose, cfu Max.Volume/24 hrs 3-6 I 1 x 10e11 200 ml 3-6 II 2 x 10e11 200 ml 3-6 III 3 x 10e11 200 ml Monitoring Plan: Patient's clinical status including need or duration of mechanical ventilation therapy, change in oxygen saturation, blood counts, lung, liver and kidney function and vital signs, proinflammatory cytokines, including IL-6, IL-12, and tumor necrosis factor ?, CRP, LDH, D-Dimer, serum ferritin, chest X-ray are monitored as specified in the protocol and as needed in hospitalized patients during the treatment period, one week later, and every month for 6 months. Analysis of Primary Endpoint Safety analysis will be performed. The study will employ the standard "cohort of three" design. Three patients are treated at each dose level with expansion to six patients per cohort if DLT is observed in one of the three initially-enrolled patients at each dose level. The maximum tolerated dose is defined as the highest safely tolerated dose, where not more than one patient experienced DLT, with the next higher dose level having at least two patients who experienced DLT. No intra-patient escalation will take place. Dose limiting toxicity, maximum tolerated dose, incidence and severity of adverse events and significant laboratory abnormalities is the primary endpoint. Safety analysis will be performed on all patients. Patient incidence of all treatment-related AEs will be tabulated by system organ class and preferred term. Tables of fatal adverse events, serious adverse events, treatment-related AEs, and adverse events leading to withdrawal from investigation product will also be provided. Summary statistics will be provided for total number of doses, average dose administered, and duration of each treatment. Analysis of Secondary Endpoint Efficacy analysis will be conducted. Change in clinical status such as duration of fever, respiratory destress, pneumonia, cough, sneezing, diarrhea will be documented. ECOG score, mortality, length of hospital stay, duration of respirator therapy, duration of intensive care unit stay, and changes in cytokine pattern will be compared to historical controls.

Tracking Information

NCT #
NCT04378244
Collaborators
Not Provided
Investigators
Principal Investigator: Sant P Chawla, MD Mission Community Hospital