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This is a phase I, interventional, single arm, open label, treatment study to evaluate the safety and tolerability of BCMA-CD19 cCAR T cells in patients with refractory ITP associated with autoimmune disease.
Full description
Immune thrombocytopenia (ITP) Can be associated with various autoimmune diseases, including SLE, and SS. Patients with refractory thrombocytopenia often have long hospital stays, high medical costs, high demand for blood products, and are prone to complications of other systemic injuries. Such patients require active treatment to reduce the risk of life-threatening bleeding, delay the progression of the disease prognosis Glucocorticoids combined with immunosuppressive agents are still the main treatment strategies. Recently, biological agents targeting abnormal immune cells, such as rituximab and belimumab, which deplete B cells have also achieved some success in the treatment of ITP. However, these agents cannot permanently reverse the production of abnormal antibodies as they are unable to eliminate pathogenic long-lived plasma cells because these agents cannot penetrate lymph nodes and soft tissue. The BCMA-CD19 cCAR T-cells are designed to deplete antibody-producing 'root", B cells and plasma cells.
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20 participants in 1 patient group
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Min Yang, MD; Qibing Xie, MD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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