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This phase II trial studies how well giving a donor bone marrow transplant (BMT) works in treating patients with refractory Crohn's Disease. We will select patients with severe Crohn's Disease and active inflammation despite the best medical and surgical treatments. These patients must be healthy enough to undergo a transplantation procedure. They cannot have an active infection, and their heart, lungs, kidneys, and liver cannot be failing. The transplant procedure starts with chemotherapy and a small dose of radiation, to weaken a patient's immune system so that it will accept bone marrow cells from another person. After that other person's bone marrow cells are given to the patient, immune suppressive medicines are given to prevent the new cells from being rejected and to stop those cells from damaging the patient. After the new donor cells start to work, blood counts will rise and the new immune system will start to grow. During this time, there is a risk of infection. Antibiotics and anti-viral drugs will be given to prevent infection. When the new donor cells are well-established, immune suppressive medicines are discontinued. We will examine parts of the intestine that were inflamed before the start of the transplant procedure, to be sure the Crohn's Disease has disappeared after the transplant. Patients will be formally evaluated for Crohn's activity at around 100 days after transplant, and yearly after that for 5 years.
Full description
BACKGROUND:
There is strong evidence for genetic susceptibility to Crohn's Disease (CD), with environmental factors interacting with genetic polymorphisms. Some patients remain refractory to the best available therapies. In patients with intestinal inflammation related to other genetic disorders, allogeneic hematopoietic cell transplantation has led to disappearance of inflammation, for example, in patients with IPEX (immune dysregulation, polyendocrinopathy, enteropathy, X-linked) and with a mutation in the Interleukin-10 receptor, characterized by a severe, early onset, fistulating colitis for which transplantation is the only therapy that offers benefit. Eleven patients with typical CD who achieved allogeneic donor chimerism after transplant had resolution of signs and symptoms of CD that was sustained for up to 15 years. These case series suggest that allogeneic transplantation has substantial potential to cure CD.
HYPOTHESIS AND SPECIFIC AIMS:
The hypothesis is: Allogeneic hematopoietic cell transplantation (HCT) can achieve sustained remissions in patients with refractory CD, and can be done safely. The specific aims are: 1) To evaluate the safety and efficacy of allogeneic HCT as treatment for refractory CD. 2) To evaluate treatment effect on CD activity/severity using the Crohn's Disease Activity Index (CDAI) and the Simple Endoscopic Score for CD (SES-CD). 3) To evaluate safety by scoring regimen-related toxicities, time to engraftment, infectious complications, acute and chronic Graft-versus-Host Disease (GVHD), and treatment-related mortality. 4) To evaluate the effect on quality of life.
METHODS:
This study is a prospective single-arm Phase II clinical trial that will enroll 12 patients.
PATIENT SELECTION: Patients will have documented CD (see eligibility criteria below); signs and symptoms that have failed to respond satisfactorily to medical and surgical therapies; active intestinal inflammation by endoscopy and histology, and CDAI >= 250 or need for total parenteral nutrition or recurrent inflammation after resection. Donors will be a Human Leukocyte Antigen (HLA)-matched sibling or unrelated donor.
ALLOGENEIC TRANSPLANT PROCEDURE: Patients will receive a reduced-intensity conditioning regimen of cyclophosphamide, fludarabine and low-dose Total Body Irradiation (TBI), a regimen that has been used successfully in patients receiving haploidentical allografts. Marrow will be used as the graft source to reduce the risk of GVHD. GVHD prophylaxis will consist of post-transplant high-dose cyclophosphamide followed by the combination of tacrolimus and enteric coated mycophenolic acid. Supportive care includes the use of N-acetyl cysteine infusions to reduce the risk of sinusoidal liver injury from cyclophosphamide; prophylaxis with ursodiol to prevent cholestatic liver disease; and antimicrobial drugs as prophylaxis and preemptive treatment for infections by bacteria, fungi, herpes viruses, and Pneumocystis jiroveci. Tissue and blood samples will be archived for future studies and evaluation of immune reconstitution at predefined intervals.
EFFICACY AND SAFETY ENDPOINTS: Safety and efficacy will be based on clinical assessments, laboratory testing, and gastrointestinal endoscopy and histology at baseline, at day 100 post-transplant, and yearly for 5 years. The primary endpoint is event-free survival at 1 year, defined as alive and free of active CD by endoscopy and biopsy. Transplant-related mortality is death occurring at any time after start of allogeneic HCT. Disease activity will be evaluated using CDAI. Quality of Life will be measured using the Short Inflammatory Bowel Disease Questionnaire.
RISKS AND POTENTIAL BENEFITS: The major risks include regimen-related toxicity, infections, graft rejection, and GVHD. Autologous stem cells will be reserved in case of graft rejection. Recent advances in transplant technique have substantially reduced the mortality risk. Balancing these risks is the potential for allogeneic transplant to effect sustained remissions and cures of CD.
PRIMARY OBJECTIVES:
I. The primary objective is to evaluate the safety and efficacy of HCT as treatment for refractory CD.
SECONDARY OBJECTIVES:
I. To evaluate treatment effect on CD activity and severity.
II. To evaluate safety of allogeneic HCT as determined by regimen-related toxicities, infectious complications, acute and chronic GVHD, treatment-related mortality, overall total mortality, and time to engraftment.
III. To evaluate the effect of allogeneic HCT on quality of life (QOL) in patients with severe refractory CD.
OUTLINE:
CONDITIONING THERAPY: Patients receive fludarabine phosphate intravenously (IV) over 30-60 minutes on days -6 to -2 and cyclophosphamide IV over 1-2 hours on days -6 and -5. Patients undergo 200 cGy of TBI on day -1.
TRANSPLANTATION: Patients undergo allogeneic BMT on day 0.
IMMUNOSUPPRESSIVE THERAPY: Patients receive high-dose cyclophosphamide IV over 1-2 hours on days 3-4, tacrolimus IV daily or orally (PO) twice daily (BID) on days 5-180 with taper to day 365, and mycophenolate acid enteric coated or mycophenolate mofetil PO three times daily (TID) on days 0-35.
After completion of conditioning therapy and infusion of donor bone marrow cells, patients are followed up at 1 month, 3 months, 12 months, and then yearly thereafter for up to 60 months.
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Inclusion criteria
A diagnosis of CD established by referring physician(s) and confirmed by our review of the clinical presentation, clinical course, endoscopic and imaging findings, and histology of mucosal tissue specimens
An adverse prognosis, documented by persistent signs and symptoms of CD that have failed to respond satisfactorily to medical and surgical therapies in the past, including but not limited to systemic immune suppressive drugs and biopharmaceuticals; to be considered as refractory to medical and surgical therapy, there must be clinical, endoscopic, and histologic evidence of active inflammatory Crohn's Disease that has either persisted or recurred despite exhaustive treatment with available pharmaceutical and surgical therapies; exhaustive treatment is defined as prior exposure to the following, without durable improvement:
Endoscopic and histologic evidence of active intestinal inflammation consistent with CD; in the event that the involved mucosa cannot be readily reached by endoscopic biopsy, an imaging test that shows typical changes of CD in the intestinal tract will suffice as evidence of active intestinal inflammation; the presence of intestinal stomas does not exclude the patient from study
Severe CD as defined by one of the following:
Identification of a HLA-matched hematopoietic cell donor without a history of a disorder that can be transmitted by hematopoietic cells, including but not limited to inflammatory bowel disease, and without nucleotide-binding oligomerization domain containing 2 (NOD2) mutations in the case of a HLA matched sibling
DONORS will be a HLA-identical sibling or HLA-matched unrelated donor; unrelated donors are required to be matched by high resolution allele level typing for HLA-A, B, C and DRB1 and intermediate resolution Sequence Specific Oligonucleotide Probes (SSOP), identifying alleles in groups of related families historically defined as antigens for DQB1; an unrelated donor is considered matched if patient and donor share HLA-A, B, C alleles with identical sequences at exons 2 and 3, DRB1 alleles with identical sequences at exon 2, and DQB1 results that include the same allele groups
DONORS will have the ability to understand and the willingness to sign a written informed consent document for bone marrow harvest.
Exclusion criteria
A current complication of CD that would jeopardize survival after hematopoietic cell transplantation, including but not limited to the following:
History of progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy
Organ dysfunction or disease that would jeopardize survival after hematopoietic cell transplantation, including but not limited to the following:
Pregnancy
Fertile men or women unwilling to use contraceptive techniques during and for 12 months following transplant
History of smoking either tobacco or other herbal products in the last 3 months
Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV), hepatitis B virus (HBV), or hepatitis C virus (HCV) seropositivity
Patients whose life expectancy is severely limited by illness other than CD
Untreated psychiatric illness, including drug/alcohol abuse, that would compromise compliance
Inability to give voluntary informed consent or obtain a parent or guardian's informed consent
Demonstrated lack of compliance with prior medical care
History of a malignancy, excluding adequately treated squamous cell skin cancer, basal cell carcinoma, and carcinoma in situ
Hematopoietic cell transplant-co-morbidity Index greater than 2
DONOR: Identical twin
DONOR: Pregnant or lactating females
DONOR: HIV seropositivity or presence of HBV deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) or HCV ribonucleic acid (RNA) in the serum
DONOR: Current serious systemic illness including uncontrolled infections
DONOR: Malignancy within 10 years prior to donation of marrow, excluding adequately treated squamous cell skin cancer and basal cell carcinoma; treatment must have been completed (with the exception of hormonal therapy for breast cancer) with cure/remission status verified for at least 10 years at time of marrow harvest
DONOR: History of or symptoms consistent with inflammatory bowel disease or a serious autoimmune disorder
DONOR: Homozygous NOD2 mutation
DONOR: History of a serious disease or disorder that could be adoptively transferred by infusion of donor hematopoietic cells
DONOR: Failure to meet institutional criteria for donation as described in the Standard Practice Guidelines
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2 participants in 1 patient group
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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