Surgical Resection With Gliadel Wafer Followed by Dendritic Cells Vaccination for Malignant Glioma Patients (Gliadel Wafer)
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ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT00576446 |
Recruitment Status :
Completed
First Posted : December 19, 2007
Last Update Posted : February 20, 2013
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Malignant gliomas are very aggressive and among the most common of brain tumors. A diagnosis carries with it a median survival of approximately 12 months, with 90 - 95% of patients surviving less than 2 years. The current standard treatment of surgical resection followed by radiation therapy and chemotherapy has not substantially prolonged survival and even the few treatment options shown to exhibit small increases in survival primarily benefit certain (i.e., young) patient subpopulations.
Cancer vaccines represent one novel therapy for malignant gliomas. The goal is for the body to recognize the tumor cells as foreign and produce its own response to fight off recurring tumor cells. A promising means of causing an immune response so the body can create this immunity is through the use of dendritic cell (DC) vaccines.
Dendritic cells are a small group of cells contained in everyone's white blood cell population. These cells are responsible for letting the immune system know that something foreign, like bacteria, or a tumor, is in the body. Dendritic cells help the body ward off disease by alerting the immune system.
gliadel is an FDA - approved drug - a wafer containing a concentrated amount of a chemotherapy agent. These wafers are placed into the brain cavity after the tumor is resected (removed) and deliver a steady amount of immediate chemotherapy medicine to the surrounding brain tissue. Also, since Gliadel is a local chemotherapy, it will prevent the detrimental suppression (weakening) of the immune system shown with systemic (throughout the body) chemotherapy.
In prior Phase l and phase ll studies, patients who received chemotherapy following Dendritic cells demonstrated longer progression free and overall survival than the patients who received Dendritic cells or chemotherapy alone.
The purpose of this study is to determine whether after standard therapy of tumor resection surgery, along with placement of Gliadel wafers at time of surgery followed by dendritic cell vaccines will not only generate (start) an immune response, but will provide longer progression free survival.
Patients who were screened and not enrolled in this clinical trial due to screen failure will be notified of the reason for screen failure. Pre HIV counseling and appropriate referral resources will be provided. If the screen failure is due to the positive HIV test, appropriate post HIV counseling will be provided and appropriate referrals will be made. The charts of the patients with screen failures will be destroyed.The patients charts who will be enrolled in the study kept in the locked cabinet in the research office. patients will be assigned a unique identifying code known only to the research team. Data will be captured by various source documents, or, as necessary, abstracted from hospital medical records by an experienced registered nurse. The electronic data for viral testing will be accessible to research personnel only.
Condition or disease | Intervention/treatment | Phase |
---|---|---|
Malignant Glioma | Biological: Dendritic cell Vaccine | Phase 1 |
Study Type : | Interventional (Clinical Trial) |
Actual Enrollment : | 35 participants |
Allocation: | Non-Randomized |
Intervention Model: | Single Group Assignment |
Masking: | None (Open Label) |
Primary Purpose: | Treatment |
Official Title: | A Phase l Trial of Surgical Resection With Gliadel Wafer Placement Followed by Vaccination With Dendritic Cells Pulsed With Tumor Lysate for Patients With Malignant Glioma |
Study Start Date : | April 2007 |
Actual Primary Completion Date : | May 2012 |
Actual Study Completion Date : | May 2012 |
Arm | Intervention/treatment |
---|---|
Experimental: 1 |
Biological: Dendritic cell Vaccine
Patients will receive three vaccines every two weeks |
- To assess the survival of malignant glioma a, to assess the immunogeneicity of patients who receive Dendritic cell vaccine , to assess progression free survival and to evaluate quality of life. [ Time Frame: 1 year ]

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Ages Eligible for Study: | 18 Years and older (Adult, Older Adult) |
Sexes Eligible for Study: | All |
Accepts Healthy Volunteers: | No |
Inclusion Criteria:
- Patients must have a histopathological diagnosis of malignant glioma
- Patients must have undergone surgery and placement of Gliadel wafer.
- Women of child bearing potential must use medically accepted form of birth control.
- A Karnofsky performance status of at least 60%
- Must be off of steroid at least two weeks prior to vaccination
- Hematologic and metabolic panel results will be within the parameters of the protocol.
- Must be capable of IRB approved Informed Consent.
Exclusion Criteria:
- Patients with systemic disease
- Presence of acute infection
- Contraindication to MRI
- Known history of autoimmune disorder
- Pregnancy
- Positive for hepatitis B, C, HIV, syphilis, HTLVa nd HCV
- Allergic to Gentamicin.
- Inability to participate as per Principal Investigator's discretion.

To learn more about this study, you or your doctor may contact the study research staff using the contact information provided by the sponsor.
Please refer to this study by its ClinicalTrials.gov identifier (NCT number): NCT00576446
United States, California | |
Cedars Sinai Medical center | |
Los Angeles, California, United States, 90048 |
Principal Investigator: | John Yu, M.D. | Cedars-Sinai Medical Center |
Responsible Party: | John Yu, Neurosurgeon, Neurosurgical Institute, Cedars-Sinai Medical Center |
ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: | NCT00576446 |
Other Study ID Numbers: |
9789 |
First Posted: | December 19, 2007 Key Record Dates |
Last Update Posted: | February 20, 2013 |
Last Verified: | February 2013 |
Glioma Neoplasms, Neuroepithelial Neuroectodermal Tumors Neoplasms, Germ Cell and Embryonal |
Neoplasms by Histologic Type Neoplasms Neoplasms, Glandular and Epithelial Neoplasms, Nerve Tissue |