Phase Ia, First in Human Open Label Dose Escalation Trial Evaluating Intravenous BI 1703880 in Combination With Intravenous Ezabenlimab for Treatment of Advanced Solid Tumours
Boehringer Ingelheim
Summary
This study is open to adults with different types of advanced cancer. People can take part if previous treatment was not successful, or no treatment exists. The purpose of this study is to find the highest dose of a medicine called BI 1703880 that people with advanced cancer can tolerate when taken together with ezabenlimab. BI 1703880 and ezabenlimab are medicines that may help the immune system fight cancer. In this study, BI 1703880 is given to people for the first time. Participants get BI 1703880 and ezabenlimab as infusions into a vein. During the first 6 weeks, they get BI 1703880 once a week. Later, they get BI 1703880 every 3 weeks. After the first 3 weeks, they get ezabenlimab in addition every 3 weeks. Participants can get BI 1703880 for up to 1 year and ezabenlimab for up to 2 years as long as they benefit from treatment and can tolerate it. During this time, they visit the study site regularly. At these visits, the doctors check participants' health and take note of any unwanted effects.
Eligibility
- Age range
- 18+ years
- Sex
- All
- Healthy volunteers
- No
Inclusion Criteria: * Histologically or cytologically confirmed diagnosis of an advanced, unresectable and/or metastatic or relapsed/refractory solid tumour. Patient must have at least one measurable lesion (according to Response Criteria in Solid Tumours (RECIST 1.1)). * Patient must have exhausted or refused established treatment options for the malignant disease, or is not eligible for established treatment options. * Has a lesion amenable to pre-treatment and on-treatment biopsy and patient consents to both biopsies. * Medically fit and willing to undergo all mandatory trial procedures. *…
Interventions
- DrugBI 1703880
BI 1703880
- DrugEzabenlimab
Ezabenlimab
Locations (13)
- Valkyrie Clinical TrialsLos Angeles, California
- Yale University School of MedicineNew Haven, Connecticut
- John Theurer Cancer CenterHackensack, New Jersey
- National Cancer Center Hospital EastChiba, Kashiwa
- Saitama Medical University International Medical CenterSaitama, Hidaka
- Japanese Foundation for Cancer ResearchTokyo, Koto-ku