Title

Study on Therapy With Dimethylfumarate (DMF) in Patients With Cutaneous T Cell Lymphoma (CTCL)
Phase IIA Study on Therapy With the NF-κB Inhibiting and Apoptosis Inducing Drug Dimethylfumarate (DMF) in Patients With Cutaneous T Cell Lymphoma (CTCL)
  • Phase

    Phase 2
  • Study Type

    Interventional
  • Status

    Completed No Results Posted
  • Study Participants

    25
The main objective of the trial is to investigate whether oral treatment of patients suffering from cutaneous T cell lymphoma with dimethylfumarate is leading to a significant improvement of modified severity assessment tool (mSWAT) values in the skin after 24 weeks of treatment (primary endpoint). Secondary endpoints are dermatologic life quality index, itching and pain measured by a NRS and the blood involvement if applicable.

Primary: safety and efficacy of DMF treatment in CTCL Secondary: Dermatologic Life Quality index, NRS for itching and pain, blood involvement if appl.
Study Started
Sep 30
2015
Primary Completion
Sep 30
2021
Study Completion
Sep 30
2022
Last Update
Mar 31
2023

Drug Dimethyl fumarate

dose escalation from 30 mg/d to maximally 720 mg/d over 9 weeks, then continuing with the highest tolerated dose following a preset design in psoriasis treatment in Germany, oral medication in tablet form. Treatment will last 24 weeks or until either progression or unacceptable side effects occur

treatment arm Experimental

patients are treated with dimethylfumarate over 24 weeks. Dosage will be escalated weekly from 30 mg/d to 720 mg/d over 9 weeks. The dose escalation scheme is the same as approved for psoriasis treatment in Germany

Criteria

Inclusion criteria:

Histopathologically confirmed Mycosis fungoides or Sézary syndrome (CTCL stage ≥ Ib according to EORTC-ISCL consensus classification) at study entry with progressive, persistant or recurrent disease
Pretreatment with at least one topical or systemic CTCL therapy or UV therapy, if the prior therapy is not possible anymore or if there is new contraindication or unsatisfactory response
Karnofsky index ≥70 % (according to Karnofsky DA, Burchenal JH. (1949). "The Clinical Evaluation of Chemotherapeutic Agents in Cancer." In: MacLeod CM (Ed), Evaluation of Chemotherapeutic Agents. Columbia Univ Press. Page 196)
Life expectancy > 3 months
Age ≥ 18 years
Adequate organ function:
differential blood count: hemoglobin ≥ 10 g/dl without transfusions, leukocyte count > 3000/µl, lymphocyte count > 700/µl
liver enzymes ≤ 2 x upper limit of normal (ULN)
serum creatinine ≤ 1.5 mg/dl or calculate creatinine clearance ≥ 50 ml/min,
Negative Pregnancy test from blood, agreement for efficient contraception in male and female patients unless infertility is documented (DMF is not approved during pregnancy)
Ability to understand character and individual consequences of the clinical trial and to provide written informed consent to participate in the study
written informed consent must be given according to ICH/GCP, and national/local regulations, before patient registration and prior to any study specific procedures.

Exclusion criteria:

Another active malignant disease with the following exceptions:
Basal or squamous cell carcinoma of the skin
In situ carcinoma of the cervix or the skin
Topical chemotherapy, superficial radiotherapy, photopheresis or systemic CTCL treatment within 28 days before study therapy initiation
Severe systemic disease or infection at study therapy initiation
Prior treatment with DMF or simultaneous topical DMF treatment
Contraindications for treatment with DMF (known hypersensibility to the drug, severe gastrointestinal disease (like ulcerations), Alcohol abuse, other obligately liver- or nephrotoxic medication, known clinically apparent renal or hepatic insufficiency)
Any psychological, familial, sociological or geographical condition potentially hampering compliance with the study protocol and follow-up schedule; those conditions should be discussed with the patient before registration in the trial
Participation in other clinical studies within 14 days before study therapy initiation
Pregnant or lactating patients
No Results Posted