Overview
The purpose of this dose escalation study is to evaluate the safety profile of escalating doses and dose schedules of NXP900.
Description
This is a dose escalation study of NXP900 administered to patients with advanced cancers. The study will propose dose and dose schedules for future studies.
Eligibility
Inclusion Criteria:
- Provide written informed consent.
- 18 years old or older.
- Advanced, metastatic, and/or progressive solid tumors for whom there is no authorized or effective therapy available, or for whom such therapies are considered inappropriate by the Investigator.
- Measurable disease according to Response Evaluation Criteria in Solid Tumors (RECIST) Version 1.1.
- Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group (ECOG) performance status of 0-1.
Exclusion Criteria:
- Subjects with known human epidermal growth factor receptor 2 (HER2+) overexpressing malignancies.
- Radiotherapy (except for palliative reasons), endocrine therapy, chemotherapy, or investigational agent within 28 days, (42 days for nitrosoureas, mitomycin-C) of first dose of NXP900. Subjects can continue to receive bisphosphonates due to metastatic bone disease or GnRH agonists if they have prostate cancer.
- Ongoing toxic manifestations of previous treatments > Grade 2 with the exception of alopecia and neuropathy.
- Subjects with treated brain metastases with evidence of progression within 28 days after central nervous system (CNS)-directed treatment, as ascertained by clinical examination and brain imaging (magnetic resonance imaging [MRI] or computed tomography [CT] scan) during the Screening period.
- Female subjects who can become pregnant (or are already pregnant or lactating), unless they have a negative serum pregnancy test before enrollment and agree to use at least one highly effective form of contraception .
- Male subjects with partners of childbearing potential, unless they agree to take measures not to father children by using a barrier method of contraception (condom plus spermicide).
- Major surgery from which the subject has not yet recovered.