Safety and Tolerability of Intravenous Fish Oil Lipid Emulsion in Children Undergoing Hematopoietic Cell Transplantation

NCT ID: NCT02512718

Last Updated: 2025-09-22

Study Results

Results pending

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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Recruitment Status

COMPLETED

Clinical Phase

PHASE1

Total Enrollment

20 participants

Study Classification

INTERVENTIONAL

Study Start Date

2016-06-30

Study Completion Date

2023-05-18

Brief Summary

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Children undergoing hematopoietic cell transplantation (HCT) for cancer or blood disorders frequently develop gastrointestinal, metabolic and infectious complications related to preparative high-dose chemotherapy and/or radiation-related toxicity. Parenteral nutrition (PN) with lipid emulsion is commonly required while gastrointestinal complications preclude adequate oral or enteral intake. PN and lipids may increase the risk of metabolic and infectious complications in HCT patients who are inherently immune compromised.

Supplementation with omega-3 fatty acids has been linked to improvements in outcomes in several populations. Provision of fish oil lipid emulsion (FOLE), rich in omega-3 fatty acids, to children undergoing HCT is an innovative nutritional strategy that could mitigate the metabolic and inflammatory side effects of HCT and its treatment. With its potential to safely maintain essential fatty acid status, normalize blood lipids and alleviate the inflammatory response to illness, the use of FOLE may reduce the risk of infections, regimen-related toxicity, and other morbidities after HCT.

A randomized, controlled pilot study is proposed to test the safety and tolerability of FOLE, compared to standard lipid emulsion, in 20 children during hospitalization for HCT. Results of this study will provide the preliminary data needed for a larger clinical trial examining the effect of FOLE on important clinical outcomes in this population. This novel approach to nutritional care of this high-risk group will advance clinical knowledge of the impact of FOLE, and will support further investigation into nutritional adjuncts to pediatric cancer treatment.

Detailed Description

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Parenteral nutrition (PN) is often necessary for children undergoing allogeneic allogeneic bone marrow, cord, or peripheral blood stem cell (from any donor, including haploidentical donor) hematopoietic cell transplantation (HCT) to avoid malnutrition and growth failure due to the gastrointestinal toxicity associated with preparative myeloablative conditioning regimens. Intravenous lipid emulsion is a required component of PN to provide energy and essential fatty acids when oral or enteral intake is nil or minimal. Soybean oil lipid emulsion (SOLE) is the standard lipid emulsion used in PN. Complications such as metabolic instability, cholestasis, hypertriglyceridemia, and anorexia, which are common during HCT, may also be attributable to the SOLE component of PN. Fish oil based lipid emulsion (FOLE) is used in certain populations and is associated with improved outcomes, specifically in infants with intestinal failure and PN associated cholestasis. It has been reported that supplementation with omega-3 fatty acids from fish oil emulsion may preserve lean body mass, improve quality of life, and decrease length of hospital stay. Provision of FOLE to children undergoing HCT is a novel and innovative strategy to potentially mitigate the metabolic and inflammatory side effects of HCT and its treatment.

HYPOTHESIS: The provision of FOLE is safe and well tolerated in children following HCT. Our aims are to determine the safety profile (as measured by the number of grade 2 or higher adverse events) and tolerability of intravenous FOLE (as measured by serum fatty acid profiles) among children undergoing HCT compared to children receiving SOLE.

HYPOTHESIS: The provision of FOLE is associated with reduced incidence of hypertriglyceridemia in children following HCT, compared to children receiving SOLE and our aim is to determine the number (and percentage) of subjects with fasting hypertriglyceridemia during the trial. To explore trends in associations with other relevant outcomes, other exploratory outcomes (inflammatory biomarkers, body composition measurements, and quality of life indicators) will be assessed in both groups of children following HCT.

METHODS: This is a randomized, controlled, unblinded pilot study to test the safety and tolerability of FOLE, compared to standard SOLE, in children hospitalized for HCT with an underlying hematologic malignancy or myelodysplasic syndrome.

Children cared for in the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute/Boston Children's Cancer and Blood Disorders Center and who will be admitted to BCH for allogeneic HCT will be enrolled (10 subjects in each arm). Patients will be included if they meet all of the entry criteria and none of the exclusion criteria.

All enrolled subjects will receive standard transplant and medical care per HCT guidelines and protocols. A baseline study visit will occur between 14 and 7 days prior to transplant day (day 0). Regardless of enteral intake, at day 0, subjects will be randomized to either control or experimental lipid infusion. The experimental group will receive FOLE and the control group will receive SOLE beginning at day 0 of HCT. All patients, in both the control and experimental groups, will receive standard nutritional care as follows:

* The energy goal for each patient will be the measured resting energy expenditure REE, or the estimated energy expenditure determined and calculated by the clinical dietitian, to be provided by oral, enteral, and/or parenteral energy intake. Intravenous lipids will provide approximately 10 kcal/kg/day. Energy intake from other sources (oral intake, enteral feeding, PN) will be titrated to meet the individualized energy goal, accounting for the contribution from intravenous lipids.
* PN (i.e., dextrose/amino acids) will be initiated if oral or enteral energy intake declines to less than estimated or measured (REE) for \>3-5 days, but no earlier than "day 0" of the transplant course.
* Amino acids in PN will be provided according to standard, age-adjusted estimations, minus any contributions from oral or enteral protein intake.
* Lipids will be provided to all enrolled subjects at 1 g/kg/day. On the first day of the lipid infusion, lipids will be infused over 18 hours through a central or peripheral venous line per standard procedures.
* A lipid panel will be obtained 4 hours after the 1st lipid infusion is completed and while the subject is nil per os (NPO) for at least 2 hours.
* Should the subject have hypertriglyceridemia \>500 mg/dL with associated abdominal pain, an amylase/lipase level will be drawn to screen for pancreatitis.
* If required (or requested) and after tolerating day 1 of the initial 18-hour lipid infusion, the lipid infusion rate may be changed and lipids may be infused over a range of 8 to 20 hours if the rate does not exceed the maximal lipid infusion rate
* The control group will receive standard SOLE, a 20% lipid solution (Intralipid®, Baxter Healthcare, Deerfield, IL, USA).
* The experimental group will receive FOLE (Omegaven®, Fresenius Kabi AG, Bad Homburg v.d.h., Germany), a 10% lipid solution. The experimental product, Omegaven®, will be purchased from the manufacturer, stored in BCH Research Pharmacy, and labeled appropriately. The experimental product will not be altered in any way from its original manufactured state and may be infused in the same manner as standard SOLE.
* After engraftment occurs (3 consecutive days with absolute neutrophil count \>500), lipids will be discontinued at day 30, if clinically indicated, or when the patient is ready for hospital discharge, whichever comes first.
* Lipid rates of 0.15 g fat/kg/hour have been associated with fat overload syndrome; all rates are below this threshold.

Standardized demographic and clinical assessments of all study participants will be performed via medical record review concomitant with the hospitalization and selected clinic visits. Data will include medical record number, underlying diagnosis, type of donor, date of transplant, date of birth, gender, conditioning and prophylactic medication regimens. Results of routine laboratory tests (serum chemistries, blood cell counts) will be recorded twice weekly. Essential fatty acid profiles, pediatric lipid panels, and inflammatory markers will be assessed at specified intervals.

Body weight will be measured by an electronic digital scale accurate to 0.1 kg (same scale used at all visits). Standing height will be measured by stadiometer to the nearest 0.1 cm (same stadiometer used at all visits). Oral and enteral nutrient intake during the inpatient admission period of the study will be evaluated through standard nursing documentation and calorie counts. Daily calorie counts are routine practice in the HCT unit. Nutrient intake will be tabulated from 24-hour recall at outpatient visits. The total enteral and oral intake of calories, protein, carbohydrate, and fat will be calculated by nutrient analysis software (ESHA Food Processor, ESHA Research, Inc., Salem, OR). Parenteral intake will be calculated by the BCH pharmacy's specifications for PN, lipid emulsions, and intravenous fluid. The Pediatric Quality of Life Inventory (Peds QL 4.0) Generic Core and SCT Modules are reliable, validated tools for measuring health related quality of life in children and adolescents ages 2 to 18 with items specific to children who have had HCT. Separate parent and age-appropriate child questionnaires that address similar questions regarding quality of life will be administered at baseline, day +30, and day +100. Air-displacement plethysmography (ADP) is a non-invasive, quick and accurate measure of body density. ADP (BOD POD, Cosmed USA, Concord CA) will be used at specified intervals to estimate body composition (percent body fat and percent lean mass) in subjects.

Individual subjects will be withdrawn from the study if they develop:

1. uncontrolled bleeding attributed to the use of Omegaven
2. persistent fasting hypertriglyceridemia (triglyceride level \> 500 mg/dl on 3 separate occasions, obtained 4 hours after the lipid infusion has been completed and while the subject is NPO for at least 2 hours)
3. persistent essential fatty acid deficiency (triene:tetraene \>0.2 for 2 consecutive measurements)
4. intolerance or allergy to the assigned lipid emulsion
5. parent or guardian request
6. principal investigator believes withdrawal is in the best medical interest of the patient
7. baseline fasting (NPO for 2 hours) triglyceride level \> 500 mg/dL on 2 consecutive measurements

Study discontinuation will occur:

1. upon recommendation of the data and safety monitoring board
2. two or more serious adverse events, occurring across different subjects, possibly or probably related to study participation.

Adverse events for each study arm will be tabulated and categorized by grade. Incidence of adverse events will be presented graphically in a dot plot with each adverse event listed on the vertical axis, incidence displayed as a percentage on the horizontal axis, with different markers for each study. The primary endpoint, the number of adverse events that are grade 2 or higher, will be summarized as mean ± SD. Comparison of the primary endpoint across study arms will be assessed by the two one-sided tests procedure.

This consists of testing:

H1o: μFOLE - μSOLE ≤ θ1 vs H1a: μFOLE - μSOLE \> θ1 H2o: μFOLE - μSOLE ≥ θ2 vs H2a: μFOLE - μSOLE \< θ2. Equivalence will be declared only if both H1o and H2o are rejected, each at α = 0.05. This is equivalent to testing that the 1 - 2α confidence interval for μFOLE - μSOLE is contained within the equivalence interval \[θ1, θ2\]. If the distribution of adverse events is more skewed than expected, then a lognormal distribution will be assumed.

Conditions

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Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation

Study Design

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Allocation Method

RANDOMIZED

Intervention Model

PARALLEL

Primary Study Purpose

SUPPORTIVE_CARE

Blinding Strategy

NONE

Study Groups

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Fish Oil Lipid Emulsion

1 g/kg intravenous fish oil lipid emulsion (Omegaven) daily, provided starting day of transplant through day 30 or hospital discharge, whichever comes first.

Group Type EXPERIMENTAL

Omegaven

Intervention Type DRUG

Comparison of FOLE vs. SOLE

Soybean Oil Lipid Emulsion

1 g/kg intravenous soybean oil lipid emulsion (SOLE) daily, provided starting day of transplant through day 30 or hospital discharge, whichever comes first.

Group Type ACTIVE_COMPARATOR

Soybean oil lipid emulsion

Intervention Type DRUG

Comparison of FOLE vs. SOLE

Interventions

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Omegaven

Comparison of FOLE vs. SOLE

Intervention Type DRUG

Soybean oil lipid emulsion

Comparison of FOLE vs. SOLE

Intervention Type DRUG

Other Intervention Names

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Fish oil lipid emulsion Intralipid

Eligibility Criteria

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Inclusion Criteria

1. Planned myeloablative allogeneic bone marrow, cord, or peripheral blood stem cell (from any donor, including haploidentical donor) HCT conditioning regimen using either TBI (planned cumulative dose \>1100cGy) or busulfan in addition to other chemotherapeutic agents
2. Planned related or unrelated bone marrow donor matched at a minimum of out of 10 human leukocyte antigen (HLA) loci (HLA-A, -B, -C, -DRB1, and -DQ), or planned related or unrelated cord blood donor matched at a minimum of 4 out of 6 HLA loci (HLA-A, -B, and -DRB1), or a haplo- identical related donor; typing must be at the allele level for unrelated donors, antigen level typing is acceptable for related donors
3. Diagnosis of a hematological malignancy including myelodysplasia.

Exclusion:

1. Unable or unwilling to return for day +30 or day +100 testing
2. GVHD prophylaxis that includes rapamycin
3. Allergy to egg, fish (including seafood and/or shellfish), or soy/legume products

a. Patients with egg, fish (including seafood and/or shellfish), or soy/legume intolerance without a documented allergy may still be included at the discretion of the PI and patient/family
4. Other contraindication to PN or intravenous lipids
5. Unstable diabetes mellitus
6. Stroke, cardiac infarction or embolism within 6 months prior to HCT OR current, ongoing treatment for stroke, infarction, and/or embolism
7. Undefined coma status,
8. Lipid nephrosis,
9. Pathological hyperlipidemia (2 consecutive fasting triglyceride levels \> 500 mg/dL),
10. Active/acute pancreatitis with hyperlipidemia (fasting triglyceride levels \> 500 mg/dL) (see section 3.5 for specific diagnostic criteria),
11. History of parenteral nutrition (PN) use with any intravenous lipid product or use of any intravenous lipid product without PN within 6 months prior to HCT
12. Co-enrollment in other interventional clinical studies.
13. Clinically significant pleural or pericardial effusion

a) If a pleural or pericardial effusion is noted on the pre-transplant testing echocardiogram, the PI will contact the cardiologist to ask if it is clinically significant. If clinically insignificant pleural or pericardial effusion exists at baseline AND the patient is randomized to FOLE, the PI will seek approval for inclusion with the primary attending and decide upon appropriate monitoring to include close clinical observation, cardiology consultation and/or serial echocardiograms where appropriate.
14. Aluminum toxicity, especially in patients with renal impairment
15. Risk of infection
16. Refeeding syndrome
Minimum Eligible Age

2 Years

Maximum Eligible Age

18 Years

Eligible Sex

ALL

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

No

Sponsors

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Alexandra N. Carey

OTHER

Sponsor Role lead

Responsible Party

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Alexandra N. Carey

Assistant Professor of Pediatrics

Responsibility Role SPONSOR_INVESTIGATOR

Principal Investigators

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Alexandra N Carey, MD

Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR

Boston Children's Hospital

Christopher Duggan, MD, MPH

Role: STUDY_DIRECTOR

Boston Children's Hospital

Locations

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Boston Children's Hospital

Boston, Massachusetts, United States

Site Status

Countries

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United States

Other Identifiers

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P00016641

Identifier Type: -

Identifier Source: org_study_id

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