Mesenchymal Stem Cells In Cisplatin-Induced Acute Renal Failure In Patients With Solid Organ Cancers
NCT ID: NCT01275612
Last Updated: 2018-03-21
Study Results
The study team has not published outcome measurements, participant flow, or safety data for this trial yet. Check back later for updates.
Basic Information
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WITHDRAWN
PHASE1
INTERVENTIONAL
2010-11-30
2018-03-19
Brief Summary
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Detailed Description
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Present strategies for the treatment of acute renal failure have focused on targeting individual mechanisms thought to contribute to ischemic or toxic insults to the kidney.An alternative possibility is to adopt a novel strategy that would allow regeneration of the injured renal tissue. Renal recovery following acute tubular injury, like that induced by cisplatin treatment, is often a slow process requiring many days to weeks to occur. Attempts to accelerate recovery have focused on the administration of growth factors, hepatocyte growth factor, or insulin-like growth factor-1. While growth factor therapy has been successful in experimental models, no beneficial effects have been observed in limited clinical trials. The ability of extrarenal cells to participate in the regenerative response following post-transplant acute renal failure may hold true for acute renal failure that develops in native kidneys after cisplatin therapy. The rationale for this approach rests on the recent demonstration in mice and in athymic nude rats that stem cells from bone marrow can be used to grow new muscle or blood vessels in heart tissue that has been damaged after myocardial infarction. Similarly, consistent evidence of the beneficial effect of bone-marrow derived cell therapy has been recently reported in humans with ischemic heart disease. This approach has been also successfully extended to repair ischemically and cisplatin injured renal tubules in mice. The observation raises the possibility that adult-derived bone marrow cells could be administered to enhance the recovery from renal injury. Although no human data so far are available, we expect that ex-vivo expanded donor bone-marrow derived mesenchymal stromal cells (MSC) infusion would allow to accelerate tubular regeneration and thus renal function recovery in patients with cisplatin-induced acute renal failure, a disease that, like ischemically-induced acute renal injury, so far has no cure.
Up to now there is no clinical study of repair tissue injury in patients with acute renal failure due to ischemic or toxic insults. Nevertheless, there are clinical data on the effectiveness of MSC infusion in other diseases/conditions like as inborn errors of metabolism,osteogenesis imperfecta,allogeneic HSC transplantation, treatment of acute GVHD, acute myocardial infarction.
The aim of this pilot, explorative, study is to test the feasibility and safety of systemic infusion of donor ex-vivo expanded MSC to repair the kidney and improve function in patients with solid organ cancers who develop acute renal failure after chemotherapy with cisplatin.
Conditions
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Study Design
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NA
SINGLE_GROUP
TREATMENT
NONE
Study Groups
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Cell therapy
Mesenchymal stromal cell infusion
The first 3 patients will receive a single i.v infusion of donor ex-vivo expanded MSC (1 x 106 MSC/kg). If the efficacy outcome of cell treatment is negligible or partial and the procedure is safe, a second group of additional 3 patients will be enrolled. They will be given MSC i.v infusion at higher dose (2 x 106 MSC/kg).Should the therapeutic efficacy of this treatment again negligible or marginal, but still safe, a third group of 3 patients will be enrolled in the study. The dose of cells to be infused will be up-titrated to 5 x 106 MSC/kg.
Interventions
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Mesenchymal stromal cell infusion
The first 3 patients will receive a single i.v infusion of donor ex-vivo expanded MSC (1 x 106 MSC/kg). If the efficacy outcome of cell treatment is negligible or partial and the procedure is safe, a second group of additional 3 patients will be enrolled. They will be given MSC i.v infusion at higher dose (2 x 106 MSC/kg).Should the therapeutic efficacy of this treatment again negligible or marginal, but still safe, a third group of 3 patients will be enrolled in the study. The dose of cells to be infused will be up-titrated to 5 x 106 MSC/kg.
Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
* Requiring cisplatin therapy (\>80mg/m2) against advanced head and neck carcinoma, non-small cell lung cancer stage IIIB/IV, bladder transitional cell carcinoma locally advanced or metastatic, which are not amenable to surgical resection or ablation with curative intent
* An Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group performance status (ECOG PS) \<2
* Normal renal, hepatic and bone marrow function
* Physician's assessment of life expectancy: 4-10 months
* Aged \> 18 years
* Evidence of acute renal injury as assessed by percent increase of NGAL concentration in spot urine \> 3500% over baseline values at day 2 post-cisplatin infusion
* Written informed consent
Exclusion Criteria
* Serious concomitant diseases not adequately responding to specific therapy
* Symptomatic brain metastases
* Pregnancy
* Previous cisplatin infusion
18 Years
80 Years
ALL
No
Sponsors
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Mario Negri Institute for Pharmacological Research
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Principal Investigators
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Giuseppe Remuzzi, MD
Role: STUDY_CHAIR
Department of Immunology and Clinical Transplantation/Mario Negri Institute for Pharmacological Research and Ospedali Riuniti of Bergamo
Norberto Perico, MD
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR
Mario Negri Institute for Pharmacological Research
Martino Introna, MD
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR
Cell and Gene Therapy Laboratory "G.Lanzani" Bergamo
Alessandro Rambaldi, MD
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR
Unit of Hematology - Ospedali Riuniti of Bergamo
Carlo Tondini, MD
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR
Unit of Oncology - Ospedali Riuniti of Bergamo
Locations
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Unit of Oncology - Ospedali Riuniti of Bergamo
Bergamo, BG, Italy
Countries
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Other Identifiers
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2008-007485-35
Identifier Type: EUDRACT_NUMBER
Identifier Source: secondary_id
CIS/MSC 08
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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