Clinical Trial: Use of Rft5-Dga to Deplete Alloreactive Cells for Pts With Fanconi Anemia After Haploidentical SCT

Study Status: Terminated
Recruit Status: Terminated
Study Type: Interventional

Official Title: A Phase I Study Evaluating The Use Of Rft5-Dga To Deplete Alloreactive Cells For Patients With Fanconi Anemia After Haploidentical Stem Cell Transplantation

Brief Summary:

While stem cell transplantation has proven an effective means of treating a wide variety of diseases involving hematopoietic stem cells and their progeny, a shortage of donors has proved a major impediment to the widest application of the approach. Until recently, only MHC identical donors could be used with safety. Such donors were originally siblings or other closely related family members. Over the past decade, the growth of allogeneic donor panels has allowed transplantation with stem cells obtained from a volunteer donor panel.

While it is now possible to obtain HLA identical unrelated donor stem cells for approximately 75% of individuals of Northern European backgrounds, the situation for most other ethnic groups is much less satisfactory. Even when a matched donor can be found, the elapsed time between commencing the search and collecting the stem cells usually exceeds three months, a delay that may doom many of the neediest patients. Hence there has been considerable interest in making use of HLA haploidentical family donors. Most individuals have a first-degree relative who would be suitable for such protocols. Fanconi anemia (FA) is an autosomal recessive disorder characterized by the development of progressive aplastic anemia usually evident by about age seven years and often associated with various diverse congenital anomalies such as short stature, microcephaly, radial anomalies, horseshoe kidney, and cafe au lait spots.

This study will determine the number of donor lymphocytes that can be given to recipients of haploidentical stem cell transplants with Fanconi anemia after depletion of recipient-reactive T lymphocytes by ex-vivo treatment with a fixed dose of RFT5-dgA immunotoxin, and will result in a rate of Grade III/IV GVHD of < / = 25%.


Detailed Summary:

Patients will have received a haplo-identical stem cell transplant on our on-going study "CD45 (YTH-24 and YTH-54) and CD52 (Campath 1H) Monoclonal Antibody Conditioning Regimen for Allogeneic Donor Stem Cell Transplantation of Patients with Fanconi Anemia" (H-9938 IND# 7233) and will become eligible to receive allodepleted T Cells following engraftment. What follows is a summary of the treatment plan including initial transplant phase as well as generation and infusion of allodepleted T cells.

Preparative Regimen for Patients with Fanconi Anemia:

The study will be open to patients who received a haploidentical PBSCT on the MAFIA protocol and for patients who failed to engraft and receive a second haploidentical transplants with alternate conditioning consisting of ATG, Fludarabine, TBI (450cGY single dose) and Cytoxan.

In Outline MAFIA conditioning (primary conditioning regimen)

Day 8 Campath 1H 10mg iv over 4hr Fludarabine 30 mg/m2 7 Campath 1H 10mg iv over 4hr Fludarabine 30 mg/m2 6 Campath 1H 10mg iv over 4hr Fludarabine 30 mg/m2 5 YTH 24/54 400ug/kg over 6 hr Fludarabine 30 mg/m2

  • 4 YTH 24/54 400ug/kg over 6 hr Fludarabine 30 mg/m2
  • 3 YTH 24/54 400ug/kg over 6 hr
  • 2 YTH 24/54 400ug/kg over 6 hr
  • 1 Rest
  • 0 CD34-selected PBSC infusion

Stem Cell Infusion: One day after the completion of pretransplant conditioning therapy (day 0), CD34+ cells will be infused through a central venous catheter as outlined in CAGT SOPs.

Same as current

Current Secondary Outcome:

  • To analyze immune reconstitution in these patients. [ Time Frame: 1 yr ]
  • To measure their overall and disease free survival, at 100 days and at 1 year after transplant. [ Time Frame: 1 yr ]


Original Secondary Outcome: Same as current

Information By: Baylor College of Medicine

Dates:
Date Received: December 21, 2007
Date Started: March 2002
Date Completion:
Last Updated: March 3, 2014
Last Verified: March 2014