Purpose of this Study
We are doing this study to find out if a study drug called belzupacap sarotalocan (bel-sar) is a safe and effective option when it is combined with laser light therapy for people who have a type of eye cancer called an indeterminate lesion (a growth in your eye that is suspected to be melanoma) or choroidal melanoma, which is also known as eye melanoma.
Who Can Participate?
Eligibility
Adults ages 18+ who:
- Have no evidence of metastatic disease
- Have not received any previous treatment for eye melanoma
Age Range
18-110
Sex/Genders
Male (cisgender)
Female (cisgender)
Non-binary or gender fluid
Transgender male
Transgender female
Looking for Healthy Participants
No
What is Involved?
Description
If you choose to join this study, you will get a random assignment to 1 of 3 groups:
- Group 1: If you are in this group, you will receive a high dose of the study drug and will then get the laser application.
- Group 2: If you are in this group, you will receive a lower dose of the study drug and will then get the laser application.
- Group 3: If you are in this group, you will receive a sham dose (inactive dosing that doesn't have drug) and will then get a sham laser application.
- Group 1: 40%
- Group 2: 20%
- Group 3: 40%
Locations
Duke University Hospital
Visit Timing
Weekdays
Compensation
Yes
Spanish Materials Available
No
Study Details
Full Title
A Phase 3 randomized, masked, controlled trial to evaluate efficacy and safety of belzupacap sarotalocan (AU-011) treatment compared to sham control in subjects with primary indeterminate lesions or small choroidal melanoma
Principal Investigator
Miguel
Materin
Protocol Number
PRO00115154
NCT ID
NCT06007690
Phase
III
Enrollment Status
Pending Open to Enrollment