A trial of SRA737 for advanced cancer
Please note - this trial is no longer recruiting patients. We hope to add results when they are available.
Cancer type:
Status:
Phase:
- large bowel cancer
- ovarian cancer
- non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC)
- prostate cancer
- head and neck cancer
- squamous cell carcinoma (SCC) of the anus
More about this trial
- find the highest safe dose of SRA737
- find out the side effects of SRA737
- learn about what happens to the drug in the body
- learn about what happens to your cancer when taking SRA737
Who can enter
- Have satisfactory blood tests results
- Are able to swallow and absorb capsules
- Have a sample of your cancer available (archival tumour tissue) or are willing to have a sample of cancer taken (a biopsy) if there is no suitable sample available
- Are well enough to carry out your normal activities, apart from heavy physical work (performance status of 0 or 1)
- Are at least 18 years old
- Are willing to use reliable contraception during the trial and for 6 months afterwards if there is any chance you or your partner could become pregnant
- Your cancer has certain changes (mutations). Your doctor can tell you more about this
- You have at least 1 area of cancer that can be seen and measured on a scan, your PSA level is increasing if you have prostate cancer, or doctors have found enough abnormal cells called circulating tumour cells (CTCs) in your bloodstream
- You have large bowel cancer that has spread to another part of the body (metastatic) and you have had at least 1 type of chemotherapy (chemotherapy regimens)
- You have ovarian cancer (high grade serous ovarian cancer, fallopian tube cancer or primary peritoneal cancer) that must have gotten worse 6 months or less after finishing treatment with a platinum type of chemotherapy
- You have ovarian cancer that has a change (amplification) in the CCNE1 gene, or another gene that has a similar effect. Your ovarian cancer must have gotten worse 6 months or less after finishing treatment with a platinum type of chemotherapy
- You have non small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) that has come back or spread to another part of the body and you have had at least 1 chemotherapy regimen
- You have prostate cancer that has spread beyond the prostate gland and has gotten worse after treatment with a type of hormone therapy called anti androgen
- You have a squamous cell carcinoma (SCC) of the head and neck that has come back or spread to another part of the body after treatment with radiotherapy and doctors think that you can’t have surgery to try to cure your cancer. You must also have had at least 1 chemotherapy regimen
- You have a squamous cell carcinoma (SCC) of the anus that has come back or spread to another part of the body after treatment and doctors think that you can’t have treatment to try to cure your cancer. You must also have had at least 1 chemotherapy regimen
- You have had radiotherapy in the last 6 weeks, unless it was to control symptoms (palliative radiotherapy), or radiotherapy to more than 25% of your bone marrow in the past 8 weeks (the doctor will check for this)
- You have had chemotherapy in the past 4 weeks (6 weeks if it was immunotherapy, the drug mitomycin C or chemotherapy from a group of drugs called nitrosoureas)
- You have had hormone therapy in the last 4 weeks apart from luteinizing hormone for prostate cancer
- You have had treatment with SRA737 or any similar drug in the past 6 months before having SRA737
- You have had another cancer in the past 2 years apart from successfully treated cancers that doctors don’t expect to come back
- You have moderate to severe side effects from previous anti-cancer treatments (apart from hair loss or other side effects your doctor thinks will not affect the trial)
- Your cancer has spread to your brain. You might be able to take part if it hasn’t got worse in the past 8 weeks and you are taking part in the 1st part of this trial (dose escalation)
- You have had a bone marrow transplant
- You have had an experimental treatment in the past 4 weeks
- You have heart problems such as congestive heart failure, an irregular heartbeat (arrhythmia) or cardiac ischaemia (a condition where your heart’s blood supply is blocked) in the past 6 months
- You have not recovered from a major surgery
- You have an infection that needs to be treated
- You have HIV
- You have hepatitis B or hepatitis C
- You have any other serious medical condition that the trial team think could affect you taking part
- You are pregnant or breastfeeding
- You have an allergy to peanuts
Trial design
- finding the best dose of SRA737 (dose escalation)
- learning more about how the drug works (expansion cohort)
Hospital visits
- a physical examination
- blood tests
- urine test
- a biopsy
- a CT scan or MRI scan
- an x-ray or bone scan
- heart trace (ECG)
- heart ultrasound (echocardiogram)
- a physical examination
- blood tests
- urine test
- heart trace
- a heart ultrasound if needed
- 4 weeks after stopping SRA737
- every 4 months (until you start a new anti cancer treatment or your cancer gets worse)
Side effects
- tiredness (fatigue)
- feeling or being sick
- diarrhoea
- low levels of potassium in your blood
- loss of appetite
Recruitment start:
Recruitment end:
How to join a clinical trial
Please note: In order to join a trial you will need to discuss it with your doctor, unless otherwise specified.
Chief Investigator
Dr Udai Banerji
Supported by
Sierra Oncology, Inc.
Experimental Cancer Medicines Centres (ECMC)
If you have questions about the trial please contact our cancer information nurses
Freephone 0808 800 4040