FDA Places Clinical Hold on Phase 1/2 Trial Evaluating BPX-601 for Metastatic Pancreatic, Prostate Cancer

Article

The FDA placed a clinical hold on patient enrollment and dosing for the ongoing phase 1/2 dose-escalation clinical trial evaluating BPX-601 in patients with previously treated metastatic pancreatic or prostate cancer.

The FDA has placed a clinical hold on patient enrollment and dosing for an ongoing phase 1/2 dose-escalation clinical trial evaluating BPX-601 in patients with previously treated metastatic pancreatic or prostate cancer, according to Bellicum Pharmaceuticals, the developer of the agent.

The FDA indicated it is taking this action due to the death of a patient with pancreatic cancer in the trial reported to the agency by the company. However, the clinical investigator and Bellicum reported that the patient death was unrelated to BPX-601 and rimiducid.

Bellicum suggested it intends to work closely with the FDA to address the agency’s questions and fulfill the requirements for resuming the trial.

BPX-601, the company’s first GoCAR-T product candidate, incorporates iMC (inducible MyD88/CD40). iMC is designed to provide a powerful boost to T cell proliferation and persistence, production of immunomodulatory cytokines, and enable the CAR-T to override key immune inhibitory mechanisms, including PD-1 and TGF-beta. BPX-601 is being evaluated as a treatment for both pancreatic and prostate tumors expressing prostate stem cell antigen.

Importantly, the clinical hold does not affect Bellicum’s plans to initiate enrollment in the phase 1/2 clinical trial of BPX-603, a dual switch GoCAR-T, in patients with HER2-positive solid tumors by the end of the year.

Reference:

Bellicum Reports Clinical Hold Placed on BPX-601 Phase 1/2 Clinical Trial [news release]. Houston. Published December 7, 2020. Accessed December 7, 2020. https://www.globenewswire.com/news-release/2020/12/07/2140457/0/en/Bellicum-Reports-Clinical-Hold-Placed-on-BPX-601-Phase-1-2-Clinical-Trial.html

Recent Videos
Differences in pancreatic cancer responses to treatment elicits a need to better educate patients on expectations in treatment, particularly chemotherapy.
Increasing patient awareness of modifiable risk factors for pancreatic cancer may help mitigate incidence of pancreatic cancers.
It may be crucial to test every patient for markers such as BRAF V600E mutations, NRG1 fusions, and KRAS G12C mutations to help manage pancreatic cancers.
Tanios S. Bekaii-Saab, MD, emphasizes the idea of moving targeted therapies to earlier lines of treatment to further improve outcomes in pancreatic cancer.
Experts from Vanderbilt University Medical Center emphasize gathering a second opinion to determine if a tumor is resectable in patients with pancreatic cancer.
Experts from Vanderbilt University Medical Center discuss the use of intraoperative radiation therapy in a 64-year-old patient with pancreatic cancer.
Investigators are assessing the use of IORT in patients with borderline resectable or unresectable pancreatic cancer as part of the phase 2 PACER trial.
Kamran Idrees, MD, MSCI, MMHC, FACS, discusses how factors such as vessel involvement can influence the decision to proceed with surgical therapy.
Milad Baradaran, PhD, DABR, outlines the design of Mobetron as an option for administering intraoperative radiation therapy in pancreatic cancer care.
Intraoperative radiation therapy may allow surgical and radiation oncologists to collaboratively visualize at-risk areas in patients with cancer.
Related Content