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Updated May 2026 · ClinicalTrials.gov

RECRUITINGPhase 1 / Phase 2INTERVENTIONAL

A Phase I/II Trial of UCB4594 in Participants With Advanced Cancer

A Cancer Research UK Phase I/II Trial to Assess the Safety, Tolerability, Pharmacokinetics and Preliminary Anti-tumour Activity of UCB4594 Alone and in Combination With Anti-cancer Treatments in Participants With Advanced Malignancies

A Phase I/II Trial of UCB4594 in Participants With Advanced Cancer (NCT06380816) is a Phase 1 / Phase 2 interventional studying Advanced Solid Tumours and Squamous Cell Carcinoma of Head and Neck, sponsored by Cancer Research Uk. RECRUITING as of the most recent ClinicalTrials.gov update. Talk to your doctor before contacting the trial site.

Important: This information is not medical advice. Talk to your doctor about whether a clinical trial is right for you.

About This Trial

This clinical trial is looking at UCB4594. This is the first time the drug is being tested in humans. UCB4594 is a type of drug called a monoclonal antibody. It has been designed to work by targeting a protein called human leucocyte antigen G (HLA-G) that is found in high levels on some cancer cells. By attaching itself to this protein it may help the immune system to attack and kill the cancer cells. The four main aims of the clinical trial are to find out: 1. The best dose of UCB4594 that can be given safely to participants in the trial. 2. What the side effects of UCB4594 are and how they can be managed. 3. What happens to UCB4594 inside the body and how it affects cancer cells. 4. Whether UCB4594 can cause cancer to shrink.

What Stage of Research Is This?

Phase 1 trials test a new treatment for the first time in humans, focusing on safety, dosing, and how the body processes the drug. For Advanced Solid Tumours, a Phase 1 study typically enrolls a small number of participants — often healthy volunteers or patients who have exhausted standard treatment options. Phase 1 results determine whether a treatment moves into larger Phase 2 efficacy studies.

This trial is currently recruiting participants. The sponsor has registered the study with ClinicalTrials.gov as actively enrolling, which means new applicants who meet the eligibility criteria can be considered for screening. Trial status can change between updates — confirm current recruiting status with the study contact before traveling for a screening visit.

Target enrollment of 167 participants puts this in the typical range for a Phase 2-style efficacy study or a moderate Phase 3 trial in a focused Advanced Solid Tumours subpopulation. At this scale, the study has enough statistical power to detect a clear treatment effect but is not the largest cohort in the field.

Who May Be Eligible (Plain English)

Who May Qualify: 1. Written (signed and dated) willing to sign a consent form and capable of co-operating with investigational medicinal product (IMP) administration and follow-up 2. Participant population: Histologically or cytologically proven advanced solid tumours (as specified below), refractory to conventional treatment, or for which no conventional therapy is considered appropriate by the Investigator or is declined by the participant. Module A (dose escalation): Tumour types which have shown high levels of human HLA-G expression (as reported in the literature): head and neck squamous cell carcinoma, non-small cell lung cancer, colorectal cancer, triple-negative breast cancer, renal cell cancer (clear cell only), oesophago-gastric cancer (excluding gastrointestinal stromal tumour), cervical cancer, ovarian cancer, pancreatic cancer. N.B. Participants with small cell type cancers on histology/cytology are excluded. Pre-treatment biopsies are mandatory for all participants. Paired biopsies will be mandatory for participants from doses of 30 mg and higher. Participants must have disease amenable to biopsy (excluding bone metastases) as deemed safe by the Investigator 3. Measurable disease, according to RECIST v1.1 4. expected to live at least 12 weeks 5. Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group performance status of 0 or 1 6. Haematological and biochemical indices within defined ranges. These measurements should be performed to confirm the patient's eligibility to participate in the trial 7. Aged 18 years or over at the time consent is given. Participants aged 16-17 years may be eligible for recruitment to the backfill cohorts in dose escalation once adequate safety and toxicity data have been established in participants aged 18 years or over. All relevant data will be reviewed and a decision on the inclusion of participants aged 16-17 years will be made by the Trial Management Group Who Should NOT Join This Trial: ...See full criteria on ClinicalTrials.gov Always talk to your doctor about whether this trial is right for you.

These are translations of the protocol\'s inclusion and exclusion criteria, simplified for patients and caregivers. The original clinical text appears below. Eligibility is ultimately confirmed by the trial site\'s screening process — this summary is a starting point for a conversation with your doctor, not a final determination.

Original Eligibility Criteria

View original clinical language
Inclusion Criteria: 1. Written (signed and dated) informed consent and capable of co-operating with investigational medicinal product (IMP) administration and follow-up 2. Participant population: Histologically or cytologically proven advanced solid tumours (as specified below), refractory to conventional treatment, or for which no conventional therapy is considered appropriate by the Investigator or is declined by the participant. Module A (dose escalation): Tumour types which have shown high levels of human HLA-G expression (as reported in the literature): head and neck squamous cell carcinoma, non-small cell lung cancer, colorectal cancer, triple-negative breast cancer, renal cell cancer (clear cell only), oesophago-gastric cancer (excluding gastrointestinal stromal tumour), cervical cancer, ovarian cancer, pancreatic cancer. N.B. Participants with small cell type cancers on histology/cytology are excluded. Pre-treatment biopsies are mandatory for all participants. Paired biopsies will be mandatory for participants from doses of 30 mg and higher. Participants must have disease amenable to biopsy (excluding bone metastases) as deemed safe by the Investigator 3. Measurable disease, according to RECIST v1.1 4. Life expectancy of at least 12 weeks 5. Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group performance status of 0 or 1 6. Haematological and biochemical indices within defined ranges. These measurements should be performed to confirm the patient's eligibility to participate in the trial 7. Aged 18 years or over at the time consent is given. Participants aged 16-17 years may be eligible for recruitment to the backfill cohorts in dose escalation once adequate safety and toxicity data have been established in participants aged 18 years or over. All relevant data will be reviewed and a decision on the inclusion of participants aged 16-17 years will be made by the Trial Management Group Exclusion Criteria: 1. Radiotherapy (except palliative), endocrine therapy (unless for non-malignant disease), chemotherapy, targeted therapy or immunotherapy, or any other IMPs during the previous 4 weeks or 5 half-lives (whichever is shorter) before the first dose of IMP 2. Ongoing toxicity of previous treatments \>CTCAE Grade 1 (except alopecia of any grade, stable Grade 2 peripheral neuropathy or hormone-replacement therapy (HRT)-managed endocrine disorders) 3. Patients with rapidly progressing / symptomatically deteriorating brain/leptomeningeal metastases/untreated brain metastases are excluded. Patients with previously treated brain metastases are eligible if they haven't had a seizure or a clinically significant change in neurological status or required steroids in the last 2 weeks 4. Pregnant or breastfeeding female patients (or planning to breastfeed) 5. Women of childbearing potential. However, those not already pregnant or breastfeeding (or who discontinue breastfeeding) and meet the following are eligible: 5.1. Have a negative serum pregnancy test within 7 days before enrolment and either: 5.2.1. Agree to a form of highly effective contraception plus a barrier method, or 5.2.2. Agree to sexual abstinence Effective from the negative pregnancy test, throughout the trial and for 10 months after the last dose of UCB4594 6. Male patients with partners of childbearing potential. However, patients who meet the following are eligible: 6.1. Agree to a barrier method of contraception or sexual abstinence 6.2. Males with pregnant or breastfeeding partners must use barrier method contraception to prevent exposure of the foetus or neonate 6.3. Non-vasectomised males must also ensure any partner of childbearing potential uses highly effective contraception or agrees to sexual abstinence Effective from the date of the first dose of UCB4594, throughout the trial and for 5 months after the last dose of UCB4594 N.B. Males must refrain from donating sperm for the same period 7. Surgery from which the patient has not yet recovered 8. High medical risk because of non-malignant systemic disease, including serious or uncontrolled infection (requiring intravenous antibiotics) or unexplained fever \>38°C within 2 weeks prior to the first dose of UCB4594 9. Known to be serologically positive for hepatitis B virus, hepatitis C virus or human immunodeficiency virus 10. Active or suspected autoimmune disease, or any history of autoimmune condition that required systemic corticosteroids or immunosuppressive agents. Patients who have ever had a transplant are excluded. This does not apply to patients with: vitiligo, alopecia, or type I diabetes mellitus, psoriasis not requiring chronic systemic immunosuppressive treatment within the past 2 years, stable autoimmune-mediated hypothyroidism on HRT, and Raynaud's syndrome 11. Are being treated with escalating or supraphysiologic doses of corticosteroids or immunosuppressive agents. Participants with immunotherapy-related hypophysitis adequately treated with physiologic doses of steroids are not excluded. Use of topical, ophthalmic, inhaled, intermittent steroid injections, and intranasal corticosteroids are permitted 12. Hypersensitivity to the ingredients/excipients (including polysorbate 80) in UCB4594 13. History of significant toxicities from treatment of immune checkpoint inhibitors (CPIs) that necessitated permanent discontinuation (Patients who started on combination CPI \[e.g., ipilimumab/nivolumab\] and had toxicity requiring discontinuation of one CPI \[e.g., continued with nivolumab single agent\] are not excluded) 14. History of Grade ≥3 infusion-related reaction to monoclonal antibodies or similar drugs 15. Prior treatment with HLA-G, immunoglobulin-like transcript (ILT)2 or ILT4-targeting drug 16. Live, attenuated vaccine within 28 days prior to the first dose of IMP 17. Increased risk due to tumour flare (e.g., an initial increase in tumour size that may lead to obstruction of airways, etc) 18. Significant active pulmonary disease or condition at screening, including: 18.1. Lymphangitis carcinomatosa 18.2. History of interstitial lung disease or pulmonary fibrosis 18.3. History of pulmonary inflammatory disease 19. Evidence of bleeding diathesis 20. Significant cardiovascular disease, defined as a history of: congestive heart failure requiring therapy or left ventricular ejection fraction \<40%, unstable angina pectoris or myocardial infarction within 6 months prior to entry, or current poorly controlled angina (symptoms weekly or more), clinically significant cardiac arrhythmia within 6 months prior to entry (asymptomatic atrial fibrillation or asymptomatic first-degree heart block permitted), or myocarditis. Presence of symptomatic or severe valvular heart disease. Baseline QT interval corrected by Fridericia \>450 msec for males and \>470 msec for females on triplicate electrocardiogram is ineligible 21. Participant in or plans to join another interventional trial 22. Other current malignancies. Cancer survivors who have undergone potentially curative therapy for prior malignancy with no evidence of disease for 3+ years are eligible 23. Any other condition that, in the Investigator's opinion, means the trial is not in the patient's best interest

Treatments Being Tested

DRUG

UCB4594

Participants will receive UCB4594 as an intravenous infusion once every 3 weeks for up to 18 cycles, with each cycle lasting 21 days (\~1 year).

Locations (2)

Trial sites listed on ClinicalTrials.gov for this study. Site activation status can vary — confirm with the specific site before traveling for a screening visit.

The Christie NHS Foundation Trust
Manchester, United Kingdom
University Hospital Southampton NHS Foundation Trust
Southampton, United Kingdom

How to Talk to Your Doctor About This Trial

Bring the printable summary of this trial — including the NCT ID (NCT06380816), the sponsor (Cancer Research Uk), and the key eligibility criteria — to your next appointment. Your doctor can review the inclusion and exclusion criteria against your medical history, lab values, and current treatments to assess whether you are likely to qualify. They can also help you weigh whether trial participation makes sense alongside your existing care plan.

Useful questions to walk through together: What does the trial protocol require beyond standard care? How long is the active treatment phase, and how long is follow-up? Are there study visits at sites I can reach? Who pays for the trial-specific procedures, and who pays for standard-of-care portions? See our 25 questions to ask about clinical trials guide for a more complete checklist.

Authoritative Sources

The official record for this trial lives on ClinicalTrials.gov — the federal registry maintained by the National Library of Medicine at NIH. For background on how this trial fits into the FDA approval pathway, see the FDA drug approval process. For oncology-specific guidance for patients considering trials, the National Cancer Institute publishes patient-oriented overviews. International trial registries are aggregated by the WHO ICTRP.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the NCT06380816 clinical trial studying?

This clinical trial is looking at UCB4594. This is the first time the drug is being tested in humans. UCB4594 is a type of drug called a monoclonal antibody. It has been designed to work by targeting a protein called human leucocyte antigen G (HLA-G) that is found in high levels on some cancer cells. By attaching itself to this protein it may help the immune system to attack and kill the cancer cells. The four main aims of the clinical trial are to find out: 1. The best dose of UCB4594 that can be given safely to participants in the trial. 2. What the side effects of UCB4594 are and how they… The full protocol is registered on ClinicalTrials.gov and includes the primary outcome measures, eligibility criteria, and study endpoints.

Who can participate in NCT06380816?

Eligibility for this trial depends on the specific inclusion and exclusion criteria set by the sponsor. The plain-English summary above translates the most important criteria into accessible language; the official clinical text is preserved in the collapsible section underneath. Whether you fit any specific trial is a medical decision your doctor needs to confirm — bring the trial information to your treating physician for a full review against your medical history.

How do I contact the trial site for NCT06380816?

Contact information registered with ClinicalTrials.gov is shown in the sidebar of this page. Before reaching out, confirm with your treating physician that this trial is appropriate for your situation. The trial site will then walk you through the screening process to determine final eligibility.

Is participating in a clinical trial safe?

Clinical trials in the United States are regulated by the FDA and overseen by Institutional Review Boards (IRBs) that review the protocol for safety. Risk varies by trial — Phase 1 studies test new treatments in humans for the first time, while Phase 3 trials use treatments that have already passed earlier safety screening. The informed consent document for any specific trial details the known risks and what to expect. Discuss those risks with your physician before deciding whether to participate.

Where can I verify the data on this page?

Every detail on this page comes directly from the ClinicalTrials.gov API. Click "View on ClinicalTrials.gov" in the sidebar to see the official, unmodified record. The federal record is always authoritative; this page is a structured presentation with a plain-English eligibility translation. For background on how clinical trials are regulated, see the FDA drug approval process documentation.

How This Page Is Built

Every field on this page is pulled directly from the ClinicalTrials.gov API v2 — no estimates, no proxies. The plain-English eligibility translation is generated from the original protocol text and reviewed for fidelity to the underlying clinical criteria. The original clinical text remains visible in the collapsible section above so users and clinicians can verify the translation. Read the full methodology for the data pipeline and known limitations.

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov API v2 record for NCT06380816. Maintained by the National Library of Medicine at NIH. Public domain. Cite as: "TrialFinderData. NCT06380816. Data: ClinicalTrials.gov."

Medical disclaimer: This page is informational, not medical advice. Talk to your doctor about whether a clinical trial is right for you.

Last updated 2026-05-08 · Data from ClinicalTrials.gov.