Overview

A Pilot Study Testing the Safety and Feasibility of Restorative Microbiota Therapy (RMT) in Patients With Refractory Immune-checkpoint Inhibitor-related Colitis

Status:
Not yet recruiting
Trial end date:
2023-09-01
Target enrollment:
0
Participant gender:
All
Summary
Immune-related colitis from immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICI) is a common adverse effect causing significant morbidity and impairment of quality of life (QoL). Steroids are the first line of treatment for severe ICI induced Immune- mediated diarrhea and colitis (IMDC). If there is no improvement in 48 to 72 hours, other immunosuppressive agents (infliximab, vedolizumab) are recommended. However, efficacy data supporting the use of immunosuppressives for steroid refractory IMDC is limited by case reports/series. Clinical trials focusing on steroid-refractory colitis are sparse. Novel treatments for IMDC outside of blanket immunosuppression are needed. There is robust evidence to suggest that gut microbial diversity and composition is associated with both ICI efficacy and toxicity. Preliminary studies have shown that pathophysiology of immune mediated colitis may be related to loss of gut microbial diversity. Recently, multiple case series have shown the utility of fecal microbiota transplant for treatment of refractory IMDC providing the proof of concept. This is a pilot randomized placebo controlled study to assess the safety and feasibility of oral restorative microbiota therapy (RMT) in patients with steroid- refractory IMDC.
Phase:
Phase 2
Accepts Healthy Volunteers?
No
Details
Lead Sponsor:
University of Minnesota
Criteria
Inclusion Criteria:

- Advanced or metastatic solid tumors who have received at least two doses of ICI
(PD-1/PD-L1 with or without CTLA-4 inhibitor) within 6 months of the onset of
steroid-refractory IMDC symptoms. The ICI may be used as a single agent, or
combination or ICI in combination with other cytotoxic chemotherapy or targeted
therapy for curative or palliative intent treatment.

- Meet one of the criteria for steroid refractory IMDC defined as:

Persistent symptoms (NCI CTCAE v 5.0 Grade ≥ 2 diarrhea) 72 hours after the patient
received the high-dose corticosteroid therapy (>1 mg/kg/d prednisone or equivalent) or
Symptoms relapsed (NCI CTCAE v 5.0 Grade ≥ 2 diarrhea) upon tapering to 1mg/kg/d or more of
prednisone or equivalent or Persistent symptoms (ongoing Grade ≥ 2 diarrhea per CTCAE
v5.0.) following use of a one or more biologic agent (i.e. either a TNFα inhibitor or an
anti-integrin) in addition to steroids.

- Adequate organ function within 14 days of study enrollment defined as: Hematology:
Hemoglobin ≥9.0 g/dL, absolute neutrophil count (ANC)

≥1,000/mcL, platelets ≥75,000/mcL, Hepatic function: Total bilirubin ≤ 1.5x upper
limit of normal (ULN), AST (SGOT) and ALT (SGPT) ≤ 2.5 x institutional ULN unless
liver metastases are present, in which case it must be ≤5x ULN) Renal function:
measured creatinine clearance >40 mL/min or estimated glomerular filtration rate
(eGFR) > 40 mL/min If AST/ALT and serum creatinine elevation are suspected to be
irAEs, patients are eligible as long as the irAE are controlled (i.e. not getting
worse at the time of enrollment)

- Able to provide written consent prior to any research related activities

Exclusion Criteria:

- Known current pregnancy or breastfeeding

- Diagnosis of concomitant infectious colitis (e.g. C. difficile or other bacterial or
viral source or parasitic), unless the patient has finished an appropriate length of
treatment with antibiotics as indicated for each diagnosis at the time of enrollment

- Receiving another investigational agent or has received an investigational agent
within 60 days of study enrollment

- Any other uncontrolled Grade ≥ 3 infection at the time of enrollment (Concomitant
systemic antibiotics for non-GI infections are allowed)

- Active documented inflammatory bowel disease (e.g., Crohn's disease, ulcerative
colitis)

- Previous documented history of chronic diarrhea from non-IMDC causes

- CTCAE v 5 Dysphagia Grade 2 (symptomatic and altered eating/swallowing) or greater

- Known risk of aspiration based on history or current complaints