Status and phase
Conditions
Treatments
About
The main purpose of this project is to cure patients with high risk Sickle cell disease and other red cell disorders including thalassemia and diamond-blackfan anemia by bone marrow transplantation. The patients enrolled in this study will be those who lack matched sibling donors and therefore have no other option but to undergo bone marrow transplantation using matched but unrelated bone marrow or umbilical cord blood from the national marrow donor program registry. Since bone marrow transplantation for these disorders using matched unrelated donors has two major problems i.e. engraftment, or , the process of new marrow being accepted and allowed to grow in the the patient; and graft-versus-host disease, or the process where the new marrow "rejects" the host or the patient, this study has been devised with methods to overcome these two problems and thus make transplantation from unrelated donors both successful in terms of engraftment and safe in terms of side effects, both acute and long term.
In order to accomplish these two goals, two important things will be done. Firstly, patients will get three medicines which are considered reduced intensity because they are not known to cause the serious organ damage seen with conventional chemotherapy. These medicines, however, do cause intense immune suppression so these can cause increased infections. Secondly, in addition to transplantation of bone marrow from unrelated donors, patients will also transplanted with mesenchymal stromal cells derived from the bone marrow of their parents. Mesenchymal stromal cells are adult stem cells that are normally found in the bone marrow and are thought to create the right background for the blood cells to grow. They have been shown in many animal and human studies to improve engraftment. In addition, they have a special property by which they prevent and are now even considered to treat graft versus host disease. Therefore, by using a reduced intensity chemotherapy regimen before transplant and transplanting mesenchymal stromal cells, we hope to improve engraftment while at the same time decrease the potential for severe side effects associated with a conventional transplant which uses extremely high doses of chemotherapy.
Enrollment
Sex
Ages
Volunteers
Inclusion criteria
Patients with sickle cell disease (SCD) 1-25 years of age with an HLA-identical, but unrelated, donor or 1 human leukocyte antigen (HLA) allele mismatched bone marrow or up to 2 HLA antigen mismatched umbilical cord blood (UCB) donor with one or more of the following:
Patients aged 0-21 years with transfusion dependent alpha- or beta-thalassemia who have an HLA-identical or 1 HLA allele mismatched bone marrow or up to 2 HLA mismatched UCB donor.
Patients aged 0-21 years with Diamond-Blackfan anemia who have an HLA-identical or 1 HLA allele mismatched bone marrow or up to 2 HLA mismatched UCB donor. Diamond- Blackfan anemia patients will only be eligible if they have failed steroid therapy.
Exclusion criteria
Patients with one or more of the following:
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
6 participants in 1 patient group
Loading...
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
Clinical trials
Research sites
Resources
Legal