Official Title: A Phase I Study of the Polymerase Theta Inhibitor Novobiocin in BRCA-Mutant and Other DNA Damage Repair-Deficient Solid Tumors
A Study On:
Anus
Bones and Joints
Brain and Nervous System
Breast
Cervix
Colon
Corpus Uteri
Esophagus
Eye and Orbit
Ill-Defined Sites
Kaposis sarcoma
Kidney
Larynx
Lip Oral Cavity and Pharynx
Liver
Lung
Melanoma skin
Mycosis Fungoides
Other Digestive Organ
Other Endocrine System
Other Female Genital
Other Male Genital
Other Respiratory and Intrathoracic Organs
Other Skin
Other Urinary
Ovary
Pancreas
Prostate
Rectum
Small Intestine
Soft Tissue
Stomach
Thyroid
Unknown Sites
Urinary Bladder
Study Description
This phase I trial tests the safety, side effects, and best dose of novobiocin in treating cancer patients with alterations in deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) repair genes. Novobiocin is an antibiotic that blocks the activity of a protein called DNA polymerase theta, which helps repair DNA that has become damaged as cells grow and divide. Cancer cells that cannot repair their damaged DNA die. This medication may help shrink or stabilize cancer with a mutation in DNA repair genes.
Eligibility
Patients must have histologically confirmed malignancy that is metastatic or unresectable and for which standard curative or palliative measures do not exist or are no longer effective
At least 18 years of age or older
Patients must have tumors amenable to biopsies, and be willing to undergo biopsies at two time points (pre- and on-treatment)
Patients who have had chemotherapy or radiotherapy within 4 weeks (6 weeks for nitrosoureas or mitomycin C) prior to entering the study
Patients who are receiving any other investigational agents
Patients who are pregnant
Interested in Participating in this Trial?
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Privacy Policy
University of California, Irvine - Study Information Sheet
UCI Center for Clinical Research Potential Participant Database
Lead Researcher
Maheswari Senthil, MD
UCI Center for Clinical Research
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