Allogeneic Multivirus - Directed Cytotoxic T Lymphocytes (CTL)
NCT ID: NCT01945814
Last Updated: 2025-07-03
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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COMPLETED
PHASE1
27 participants
INTERVENTIONAL
2014-02-28
2018-10-16
Brief Summary
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Patients with blood cell cancer, other blood disease or a genetic disease may receive a stem cell transplant. After receiving transplant, they are at risk of infections until a new immune system to fight infections grows from the cord blood cells. In this study, investigators are trying to give special cells called T cells. These cells will try to fight viruses that can cause infection.
Investigators will test to see if blood cells from donor that have been grown in a special way, can prevent patients from getting an infection. EBV, AdV and CMV are viruses that can cause serious life-threatening infections in patients who have weak immune systems after transplant.
T lymphocytes can kill viral cells but normally there are not enough of them to kill all the virus infected cells after transplant. Some researcher have taken T cells from a person's blood, grown more of them in the laboratory and then given them back to the person during a viral infection after a bone marrow transplant. Some of these studies have shown a positive therapeutic effect in patients receiving the CTLs after a viral infection in the post-transplant period.
Investigators will grow these cells from donor in the laboratory in a way that will train them to recognize and remove viruses when the T cells are given after a transplant. Since most donors have previously been infected with EBV, CMV, and adenovirus, investigators are able to use their T cells that remember these viruses to grow the CTLs. However, they now also have a new way of growing CTLs from donors who have not been infected with CMV.
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Detailed Description
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Multivirus-Specific T Cells
To broaden the specificity of single CTL lines to include the three most common viral pathogens of stem cell recipients, investigators reactivated CMV and adenovirus-specific T cells by using mononuclear cells transduced with a recombinant adenoviral vector encoding the CMV antigen pp65 (Ad5f35CMVpp65). Subsequent stimulations with EBV-LCL transduced with the same vector both reactivated EBV-specific T cells and maintained the expansion of the activated adenovirus and CMV-specific T cells. This method reliably produced CTLs with cytotoxic function specific for all three viruses, which investigators infused into 14 stem cell recipients in a Phase I prophylaxis study. They observed recovery of immunity to CMV and EBV in all patients but an increase in adenovirus-specific T cells was only seen in patients who had evidence of adenovirus infection pre-infusion. A follow-up study in which the frequency of adenovirus-specific T cells was increased in the infused CTLs produced similar results, thus highlighting the importance of endogenous antigen to promote the expansion of infused T cells in vivo. Nevertheless, all patients in both clinical trials with pre-infusion CMV, adenovirus or EBV infection or reactivation were able to clear the infection, including one patient with severe adenoviral pneumonia requiring ventilatory support. CTLs recognizing multiple antigens can therefore produce clinically relevant effects against all three viruses.
CTLs for HSCT patients with virus naïve donors
All the donor specific T cell strategies discussed so far have utilized products derived from donors who are seropositive for the virus of interest. With the increasing use of cord blood (CB) grafts there are appreciable numbers of patients who are recipients of virus naïve donor grafts. CMV reactivation usually occurs from endogenous virus and seropositive recipients with seronegative donors remain the highest risk group for developing CMV. The development of multivirus specific T cells from recipients of cord blood grafts requires the priming of naïve T-cells rather than the simple expansion of pre-existing memory T-cells from seropositive donors. Using a protocol stimulating CB-derived T-cells with autologous CB-derived dendritic cells and EBV-LCL transduced with the Ad5f35CMVpp65 vector in the presence of IL-7, 12 and 15, multivirus specific T cells can be primed in vitro from the 20% fraction of a cord blood unit. So far, eight patients have received CTL as prophylaxis or treatment after CBT without toxicity. No infusion-related toxicities/GvHD have been observed and despite receiving only 80% of the CB unit, all patients engrafted neutrophils within 30 days. Early evidence of efficacy has also been demonstrated with clearance of EBV, CMV and adenovirus in two patients and decreasing EBV viral load in a third with the other 5 patients remaining virus free. Therefore, these results suggest that transfer of naïve T cell (CB)-derived virus specific T cells to patients after CBT may be safe and facilitate long term reconstitution of virus-specific T-cells in vivo.
Conditions
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Study Design
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NON_RANDOMIZED
PARALLEL
TREATMENT
NONE
Study Groups
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CTL for CMV seropositive donors
CTL for CMV seropositive donors - Allogeneic Multivirus - Directed Cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTL) targeting CMV (IE1 and pp65), EBV (LMP2, EBNA1), and Adv (Hexon and Penton) for CMV seropositive donors- three different dose levels are selected, starting with 5 x 106 (a T cell number more than an order of magnitude lower than that administered at the time of an unmanipulated marrow infusion), followed by 1 x 107 and a final dose 2 x 107 mCTLs/m2. Two additional doses (at the same level)will be administered 28 days after the first dose, in subjects that have a partial response after one dose or who receive other therapy that may affect the persistence or function of the infused CTL.
CTL for CMV seropositive donors
CTL for CMV seropositive donors-Allogeneic Multivirus Directed Cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTL) targeting CMV (IE1 and pp65), EBV (LMP2, EBNA1), and Adv (Hexon and Penton) for CMV seropositive donors dose is depending on the toxicity outcome, the maximum sample size for the this phase I portion of the trial is 14. Upon the completion of mCTL safety evaluation, additional 7 patients will be accrued at the MTD level to evaluate its antiviral activity.
CTL for CMV naïve donors
CTL for CMV naïve donors - Allogeneic Multivirus - Directed Cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTL) targeting CMV (IE1 and pp65), EBV (LMP2, EBNA1), and Adv (Hexon and Penton)for CMV naïve donors-each group will undergo an identical dose escalation. Three different dose levels are selected, starting with 5 x 106 (a T cell number more than an order of magnitude lower than that administered at the time of an unmanipulated marrow infusion), followed by 1 x 107 and a final dose 2 x 107 mCTLs/m2. Two additional doses (at the same level)will be administered 28 days after the first dose, in subjects that have a partial response after one dose or who receive other therapy that may affect the persistence or function of the infused CTL.
CTL for CMV naïve donors
CTL for CMV naïve donors - Allogeneic Multivirus - Directed Cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTL) targeting CMV (IE1 and pp65), EBV (LMP2, EBNA1), and Adv (Hexon and Penton) for CMV naïve donors dose is depending on the toxicity outcome, the maximum sample size for the this phase I portion of the trial is 14. Upon the completion of mCTL safety evaluation, additional 7 patients will be accrued at the MTD level to evaluate its antiviral activity.
Interventions
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CTL for CMV seropositive donors
CTL for CMV seropositive donors-Allogeneic Multivirus Directed Cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTL) targeting CMV (IE1 and pp65), EBV (LMP2, EBNA1), and Adv (Hexon and Penton) for CMV seropositive donors dose is depending on the toxicity outcome, the maximum sample size for the this phase I portion of the trial is 14. Upon the completion of mCTL safety evaluation, additional 7 patients will be accrued at the MTD level to evaluate its antiviral activity.
CTL for CMV naïve donors
CTL for CMV naïve donors - Allogeneic Multivirus - Directed Cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTL) targeting CMV (IE1 and pp65), EBV (LMP2, EBNA1), and Adv (Hexon and Penton) for CMV naïve donors dose is depending on the toxicity outcome, the maximum sample size for the this phase I portion of the trial is 14. Upon the completion of mCTL safety evaluation, additional 7 patients will be accrued at the MTD level to evaluate its antiviral activity.
Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
2. Cells administered as;
1. Prophylaxis for patients at risk of EBV, CMV, or Adenovirus.
2. Treatment of reactivation or infection for EBV, CMV, or Adenovirus.
3. Early treatment for single or multiple infections. Multiple infections with one reactivation and one controlled infection are eligible to enroll.
3. Steroids less than 0.5 mg/kg/day prednisone
4. Karnofsky/Lansky score of ≥ 50
5. ANC greater than 500/µL.
6. Bilirubin \<2x, AST \<3x, Serum creatinine \<2x upper limit of normal, Hgb \>8.0
7. Pulse oximetry of \> 90% on room air
8. Available multivirus-specific cytotoxic T lymphocytes
9. Negative pregnancy test (if female of childbearing potential)
10. Patient or parent/guardian capable of providing informed consent.
Exclusion Criteria
2. Patients who received ATG, Campath, or other T cell immunosuppressive monoclonal antibodies in the last 28 days
3. Received donor lymphocyte infusion in last 28 days
4. Evidence of GVHD \> grade 2
5. Active and uncontrolled relapse of malignancy
6. Pregnant or lactating
7. Unable to wean steroids to ≤0.5 mg/kg/day prednisone.
8. Patients with Grade 3 hyperbilirubinemia
4 Weeks
45 Years
ALL
No
Sponsors
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Catherine Bollard
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Catherine Bollard
Director- Program for Cell Enhancement and Technologies for Immunotherapy (CETI)
Principal Investigators
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Catherine Bollard, MD
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR
Children's National Research Institute
Locations
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Childrens National Medical Center
Washington D.C., District of Columbia, United States
Countries
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References
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Keller MD, Darko S, Lang H, Ransier A, Lazarski CA, Wang Y, Hanley PJ, Davila BJ, Heimall JR, Ambinder RF, Barrett AJ, Rooney CM, Heslop HE, Douek DC, Bollard CM. T-cell receptor sequencing demonstrates persistence of virus-specific T cells after antiviral immunotherapy. Br J Haematol. 2019 Oct;187(2):206-218. doi: 10.1111/bjh.16053. Epub 2019 Jun 20.
Other Identifiers
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MUSTAT
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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