Bone Marrow Transplantation, Hemoglobinopathies, SCALLOP
NCT ID: NCT00578344
Last Updated: 2020-07-31
Study Results
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View full resultsBasic Information
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TERMINATED
NA
8 participants
INTERVENTIONAL
2005-07-31
2012-07-31
Brief Summary
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We would like to treat patients using bone marrow transplantation, a treatment that has been used for people with SCD. The transplant uses healthy "matched" bone marrow. This comes from a brother or sister who does not have sickle cell disease or severe thalassemia. If the treatment works, the sickle cell disease or thalassemia may be cured. This treatment has been used to treat patients with sickle cell disease or thalassemia. It has worked in most cases. We hope, but cannot promise, that the transplanted marrow will make healthy cells, and patients will not have sickle cell disease or severe thalassemia anymore.
We do not know what effect this treatment will have on the damage that has already been done by the disease. Finding that out is the main reason for this study. Currently, very little has been reported about organ function after bone marrow transplants in patients with sickle cell anemia.
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Detailed Description
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* Answer questions about their medical history;
* Undergo a physical examination;
* Have tests done to see how well the lungs are working;
* Have a chest x-ray;
* Have an EKG to look at the heart;
* Have an MRI \& MRA (Magnetic Resonance Angiography, which looks at the blood vessels and the blood flowing through them). These 2 tests will look to see if the patient has had any strokes;
* Have a PET scan to look at the head and body;
* Have a liver biopsy to determine if the liver has been damaged (which can happen from iron overload that happens after many transfusions). Too much liver damage would mean a transplant cannot be done.
For the liver biopsy, the skin is numbed with medicine, and a special needle goes into the liver. The needle removes a very small piece of the liver (tissue). The tissue is taken and examined.
Also, about 30 cc (2 tablespoons) of blood will be drawn to test the blood for viruses, including HIV (the virus that causes AIDS). If the HIV test is positive, a transplant will not be done because it would be too dangerous for the patient.
At least 2 weeks before the bone marrow infusion, the patient will be immunized with Prevnar 7. Prevnar 7 is a vaccine that is used in children to protect against some types of bacteria called Streptococcus pneumoniae, which can cause the lung infection called pneumonia. People with Sickle Cell anemia are at a higher risk of dying from an infection from this type of bacteria. Although children are regularly given the Prevnar 7 vaccine, it is not common to test a child's immune response to the vaccine. In this study, we will check the immune system's response to the vaccine by drawing an extra 3 mL (less than 1 teaspoon) of blood 3 weeks after the patient gets the Prevnar 7 vaccine.
Just before the bone marrow transplant, we must kill the cells in the bone marrow that make the abnormal red blood cells found in patients with severe thalassemia or sickle cell disease. We will do this by using 3 drugs: busulfan, cyclophosphamide, and campath-1H. Campath-1H is used to prevent the body from rejecting or refusing to let the donor blood cells grow in the body. MESNA is given with the cyclophosphamide to prevent kidney damage. Methotrexate and cyclosporin are also given to prevent graft-versus-host disease (GVHD); methylprednisolone will be given after the bone marrow infusion if the patient develops GVHD. A drug will also be given to prevent seizures (either dilantin or lorazepam).
Graft-versus-host disease (GVHD) is a possible side-effect of the transplant. In GVHD, some cells in the donor marrow attack cells in the patient's body. This causes skin, liver, and bowel problems, and may damage other parts of the body. Often, these problems are fairly mild, but they can be severe or even cause death. Severe GVHD is likely to occur in about 10% of patients.
After the patient gets the drug treatment, they will be given bone marrow from a brother or sister who has healthy bone marrow that matches the patients. The healthy bone marrow will be put into a vein (given IV) in the same way that blood transfusions are given. The marrow cells then travel to the right places in the body, where they should grow and make new normal blood cells.
This is the treatment schedule:
Protocol Day \& Treatment:
14 or more days before the bone marrow infusion -- Prevnar 7 vaccine
10 days before the bone marrow infusion -- Begin Dilantin or Lorazepam (to prevent seizures)
9 days before the bone marrow infusion -- Busulfan
8 days before the bone marrow infusion -- Busulfan
7 days before the bone marrow infusion -- Busulfan
6 days before the bone marrow infusion -- Busulfan
5 days before the bone marrow infusion -- Campath 1H, Cyclophosphamide, and MESNA
4 days before the bone marrow infusion -- Campath 1H, Cyclophosphamide, and MESNA
3 days before the bone marrow infusion -- Campath 1H, Cyclophosphamide, and MESNA
2 days before the bone marrow infusion -- Campath 1H, Cyclophosphamide, MESNA, and cyclosporin
1 day before the bone marrow infusion -- DAY OF REST
Day "0" -- bone marrow infusion given
1 day after the bone marrow infusion -- Methotrexate
3 days after the bone marrow infusion -- Methotrexate
6 days after the bone marrow infusion -- Methotrexate
11 days after the bone marrow infusion -- Methotrexate
After transplant, Filgrastrim, a growth hormone for the bone marrow, may be given intravenously (through a vein), if medically necessary.
Sometimes, the donor's bone marrow does not grow. Then, the patient would be without working bone marrow cells. So that we will be ready to treat this problem if it happens, we will take bone marrow from the hip bone before the patient gets the drug treatment. The patient will be asleep (sedated) when the marrow is taken, and they will be given medicine for any pain they have afterwards. This bone marrow will be frozen and stored or preserved. If the donor bone marrow does not grow, we will thaw the stored marrow and put it back into the body. This stored bone marrow should grow and produce working blood cells. If the stored bone marrow must be given back, the disease will not be cured.
To tell whether the transplant has worked or "engrafted", we will take samples of bone marrow (bone marrow aspirate). We will do this 3 weeks after the transplant to make sure the new cells are beginning to grow. We will take another marrow sample at 3 months after the transplant. We want to make sure the new cells are still growing. This test will take about 30 to 45 minutes. Because this test is painful, the patient will be given pain medicine before, during, and after the test.
The patient will need to be in the hospital for at least 3 weeks after the transplant to make sure the transplant has engrafted. We will do several tests (of the lung, kidney, and liver) before and after the bone marrow transplant. We want to find out how much the treatment has helped the patient and how much it might help other patients. Most tests will be done every week for 4 months and at each visit to the hospital. Also, we will be looking at the immune function. To do this, we will take about 8 ml (less than 2 teaspoonful) at 6 months, 1 year, and 2 years after the transplant. When possible, we will take the blood from an IV line that the patient already has. However, at times we will have to draw the blood with another needle stick. A total amount of 200 mL (about 13 tablespoons) of blood will be collected from the patient during the entire study.
After 4 months, if the patient's health is good, they will not need to come to the hospital so often. The visits to the doctor should be more like they were before the bone marrow transplant. Since problems may happen months after the transplant and this is a new way to treat sickle cell disease and thalassemia the patient will need to have exams and blood tests done every few months during the first and second years after their transplant. After that, if all is well, the patient will need to be examined and have blood tests 4 times a year.
Conditions
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Study Design
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NA
SINGLE_GROUP
TREATMENT
NONE
Study Groups
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Allogeneic BMT/SCT Transplant
Busulfan, Campath 1H, Cyclophosphamide and MESNA:
Bone marrow infusion with pre-meds as per SOPs to take place on Day 0.
Bone marrow dose: To ensure the probability for bone marrow engraftment, 4 x 10\^8 nucleated cells/kg patient weight will be the target at donor bone marrow harvest.
Busulfan
Starting Day -9 / Busulfan 4.0 mg/kg/day IV divided into four doses daily for four days; total dose = 16 mg/kg.
Campath 1H
Day -5 through Day -2; Campath-1H dosed as per institutional guidelines.
Cyclophosphamide and MESNA
Day -5 through Day -2; Cyclophosphamide 50 mg/kg + MESNA.
Interventions
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Busulfan
Starting Day -9 / Busulfan 4.0 mg/kg/day IV divided into four doses daily for four days; total dose = 16 mg/kg.
Campath 1H
Day -5 through Day -2; Campath-1H dosed as per institutional guidelines.
Cyclophosphamide and MESNA
Day -5 through Day -2; Cyclophosphamide 50 mg/kg + MESNA.
Other Intervention Names
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Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
1. Previous central nervous system vaso-occlusive episode with or without residual neurologic findings, or has an abnormal transcranial doppler exam without neurologic findings, or abnormal MRI/MRA of the brain with or without neurologic findings;
2. Frequent painful vaso-occlusive episodes which significantly interfere with normal life activities and which necessitate chronic transfusion therapy;
3. Recurrent SCD chest syndrome events, which necessitate chronic transfusion therapy;
4. Severe anemia which prevents acceptable quality of life and necessitates chronic transfusion therapy;
5. Any of the above symptoms in which the patient is not undergoing chronic transfusion therapy;
6. The patient is undergoing chronic transfusion therapy for symptoms other than those listed and which significantly interferes with normal life activities;
7. Failed hydroxyurea therapy;
8. Indication of pulmonary hypertension on 2 separate echocardiogram examinations;
9. Patients who plan to return to resource poor areas/countries.
2. Between the ages of birth and 40 years.
3. Women of childbearing potential must have a negative pregnancy test.
Exclusion Criteria
2. Patient with SCD chronic lung disease \> stage 3 (see Appendix 1).
3. Patient with severe renal dysfunction defined as creatinine clearance \< 40 mL/min/1.73 M\^2.
4. Patient with severe cardiac dysfunction defined as echocardiogram shortening fraction \< 25% or NYHA class III or IV.
5. Patient with HIV infection.
6. Patient with unspecified chronic toxicity serious enough to detrimentally affect the patient's capacity to tolerate bone marrow transplantation.
7. Patient or patient's guardian(s) unable to understand the nature and risks inherent in the BMT process.
8. Pregnant/lactating women and those unwilling to use acceptable contraception will be excluded.
9. Patient or patient's guardian who have not signed an informed consent.
NOTE: Patients who would be excluded from the protocol strictly for laboratory abnormalities can be included at the investigator's discretion after approval by the CAGT Protocol Review Committee and the FDA reviewer.
40 Years
ALL
No
Sponsors
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Baylor College of Medicine
OTHER
The Methodist Hospital Research Institute
OTHER
Tami D. John
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Tami D. John
Assistant Professor, Pediatrics-Hema & Oncology
Principal Investigators
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Tami John, MD
Role: STUDY_DIRECTOR
Baylor College of Medicine - Texas Children's Hospital
Locations
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Methodist Hospital
Houston, Texas, United States
Texas Children's Hospital
Houston, Texas, United States
Countries
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Provided Documents
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Document Type: Study Protocol and Statistical Analysis Plan
Other Identifiers
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SCALLOP
Identifier Type: OTHER
Identifier Source: secondary_id
H-16447-SCALLOP
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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