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Hypothesis 1: A novel nonmyeloablative condition regimen will be safe and efficacious in producing stable donor chimerism and cure of severe hemoglobinopathy.
Hypothesis 2: Stable donor chimerism will result in amelioration of cerebral vasculopathy, improved cerebral perfusion and neurocognitive function.
Specific Aim 1: Study the safety and efficacy of a novel non-toxic conditioning regimen for HSCT for patients with severe hemoglobinopathies and the kinetics of lineage specific chimerism after HSCT
We will test our hypothesis that a novel nonmyeloablative condition regimen will be safe and efficacious in producing stable donor chimerism and cure of severe hemoglobinopathy:
Specific Aim 2: Optimize the immunosuppressive regimen for HSCT patients through a thorough understanding of the pharmacokinetics of Busulfan (BU) and mycophenolate mofetil (MMF) in the patient population. This will involve:
Specific Aim 3: Study the effect of complete or partial donor chimerism on silent and overt cerebral vasculopathy, and neurocognitive functioning in patients with SCD undergoing HSCT. We will test our hypothesis that stable donor chimerism will result in improvement in cerebral vasculopathy and neurocognitive function. This will include.
Full description
Severe hemoglobinopathies such as sickle cell disease (SCD) and Thalassemia are associated with considerable morbidity, organ damage and premature mortality. Allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT) is the only therapy that can cure a hemoglobinopathy. The applicability of HSCT for hemoglobinopathies is limited by the paucity of suitable donors, and risk of early regimen-related toxicity and the late effects. Reduction of the dose of myelotoxic drugs in preparative regimens prior to HSCT has the potential to increase the applicability of this curative option for patients with hemoglobinopathies. We hypothesize that a preparative regimen that maximizes host immunosuppression without myeloablation will be well tolerated and sufficient for engraftment of donor hematopoietic stem cells in patients with severe hemoglobinopathies. The long term objective of this research is to develop novel, less toxic approaches to HSCT for patients with severe hemoglobinopathies. Specific aims: 1. To evaluate the safety and efficacy of a novel nontoxic nonmyeloablative approach to hematopoietic stem cell transplantation for hemoglobinopathies. 2. To optimize the immunosuppressive regimen for HSCT patients through a thorough understanding of the pharmacokinetics of Busulfan (BU) and Mycophenolic acid (MPA) 3. To determine the effect of partial or complete donor chimerism on cerebral vasculopathy in patients with SCD. 4. To determine the rate of T cell immune reconstitution in children with sickle cell disease following myeloablative compared to nonmyeloablative stem cell transplantation, using immunophenotyping assays, CDR3 spectratyping TREC analysis, and measurement of T cell specific donor engraftment. Subjects meeting eligibility criteria in whom an human leukocyte antigen matched, partially mismatched related or unrelated donor of bone marrow or umbilical cord blood will receive a HSCT after a nonmyeloablative preparative regimen consisting of BU, Fludarabine (FLU), total lymphoid radiation and Anti-Thymocyte globulin followed by prophylaxis against graft versus host disease with cyclosporine A and MMF. Patients will be studied for survival, cure of hemoglobinopathy, absence of severe regimen related toxicity and graft versus host disease. The relationship of engraftment, survival and Graft versus host disease to kinetics of lineage specific donor chimerism and area under the curve for Mycophenolic acid and Busulfan will be studied.
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Inclusion criteria
Patients with SCD 0-35 years of age with an HLA-identical or 1 HLA antigen mismatched bone marrow or up to 2 HLA antigen mismatched umbilical cord blood (UCB) donor with one or more of the following:
Second Transplants
Exclusion criteria
Patients with one or more of the following:
Active serious infection whereby patient has been on intravenous antibiotics for one week prior to study entry. Any patient with AIDS or ARC or HIV seropositivity. Any patient with invasive aspergillums infection within one year of study entry.
Psychologically incapable of undergoing BMT with associated strict isolation or documented history of medical non-compliance.
Patients not able to receive TLI due to prior radiation therapy.
Donor Inclusion Criteria
Donor Exclusion Criteria
Donor Selection
In the case where more than one donor meets the eligibility criteria, donor selection will be guided by the following considerations:
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8 participants in 1 patient group
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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