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The goal of this study is to see if there is a benefit to giving chemotherapy and then natural killer (NK) cells. The NK cells must come from a family member who shares half of the patients HLA proteins. NK cells are a type of white blood cell. They can recognize and kill abnormal cells in the body.
Patients whose blood cancer is not cured with a stem cell transplant do not have standard treatment options. Studies have shown that NK cells from a donor can be given safely and can be helpful in treating some blood diseases. These NK cells are collected from the patients donor and purified using a separation system called CliniMACS that has been used safely in previous studies and is used in this study with the approval of the Federal Food and Drug Administration. The researchers want to find out what effects the NK cells will have on blood cancer and bone marrow function and how to maximize its benefits in treating blood cancers. The researchers hope that giving chemotherapy and then NK cells will be a better treatment for the disease than the current available treatment options.
Funding Source - Food and Drug Administration/Office of Orphan Products Development
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Inclusion and exclusion criteria
Subject Inclusion Criteria:
Diagnosis and Status
Eligible patients have evidence of disease with ≥5% bone marrow involvement detected by morphology or abnormal cytogenetics (by karyotype or FISH). Patients with molecular detection of markers characteristic of the patient's disease from two consecutive bone marrow biopsies are also eligible. Following diagnosis of relapsed disease, treatment to reduce leukemic burden is allowed prior to protocol therapy without the need for additional disease documentation prior to cyclophosphamide and fludarabine.
Cardiac: asymptomatic and LVEF at rest must be > 50%. Hepatic: < 2x ULN ALT and < 1.5 total serum bilirubin, unless liver is involved with disease, there is congenital benign hyperbilirubinemia, or other reversible causes of hepatic abnormalities are documented.
Renal: serum creatinine <1.5 mg/dl or if serum creatinine is outside the normal range, then CrCl > 50 ml/min Pulmonary: Patient cannot be oxygen-dependent.
NK Cell Donor Eligibility
Subject Exclusion Criteria:
NK Cell Donor Exclusion
Primary purpose
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12 participants in 1 patient group
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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