I have read about people developing C22 and Agfa CNS in C41 BUT at 20c. Otherwise, the normal 38C will melt the emulsion. Developer at 20C for 20 mins.
I know the C41 developer is different from C22 but it could be worth a try.
You could also just develop it as B&W.
I second that. When I worked in a pro lab some 30+ years ago, occasionally we would get a roll of C-22 film, almost always Kodacolor-X. I would lower the temperature from 100F to 70F in all the chemicals (yes, we were a Fahrenheit lab!!), and process the film for 13:00 minutes per tank, versus the 3:30 specified in the processing instructions, working on the old rule of thumb that for every 15F change in developer temperature, there should be a doubling of the time required. The one exception was the final stabilizer tank, which we gave it about two minutes, and then into the dryer.
FWIW, I saw, in the early days of C-41 processing, a lab that would run 120- and 127-width C-41 films through a C-22 line. Kodak cautioned against that, as, if I remember correctly, the Color Developer in the C-22 process was different that that in the C-41 process. But the results (for amateur films) seemed okay.