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Blood stem cells can produce red blood cells (which carry oxygen), white blood cells of the immune system (which fight infections) and platelets (which help the blood clot).
Patients with sickle cell disease produce abnormal red blood cells. A blood stem cell transplant from a donor is a treatment option for patients with severe sickle cell disease. The donor can be healthy or have the sickle cell trait. The blood stem cell transplant will be given to the patient as an intravenous infusion (IV). The donor blood stem cells will then make normal red blood cells - as well as other types of blood cells - in the patient. When blood cells from two people co-exist in the patient, this is called mixed chimerism.
Most children are successfully treated with blood stem cells from a sibling (brother/sister) who completely shares their tissue type (full-matched donor). However, transplant is not an option for patients who (1) have serious medical problems, and/or (2) do not have a full-matched donor. Most patients will have a relative who shares half of their tissue type (e.g. parent, child, and brother/sister) and can be a donor (half-matched or haploidentical donor).
Adult patients with severe sickle cell disease were successfully treated with a half-matched transplant in a clinical study. Researchers would like to make half-matched transplant an option for more patients by (1) improving transplant success and (2) reducing transplanted-related complications.
This research transplant is being tested in this Pilot study for the first time. It is different from a standard transplant because:
It is hoped that the research transplant:
Full description
This is a pilot study to determine the safety and feasibility of the COH-MC-17 regimen and ability of the regimen to induce a mixed chimeric status in severe sickle cell disease patients (hemoglobin SS or S-βº Thalassemia). The COH-MC-17 regimen consists of a non-myeloablative regimen (cyclophosphamide, pentostatin and rabbit-anti-thymocyte globulin (ATG)) followed by a CD4+ T-cell-depleted haploidentical hematopoietic cell transplant (HaploHCT).
Enrollment
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Inclusion and exclusion criteria
Inclusion:
Confirmed diagnosis of hemoglobin SS or S-βº Thalassemia sickle cell disease
Severe disease status as defined by presence of one or more of the following:
No HLA matched sibling or 10/10 matched unrelated donor
Related donor who:
Failed prior hydroxyurea therapy or have intolerance to hydroxyurea
Meets protocol specified organ function criteria
Women of childbearing potential or sexually active male: Agreement to use adequate contraception prior to study entry and 6 months post-transplant.
Exclusion Criteria
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
3 participants in 1 patient group
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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