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About
RATIONALE: Giving low doses of chemotherapy and total-body irradiation before a donor umbilical cord blood transplant helps stop the growth of abnormal cells. It also stops the patient's immune system from rejecting the donor's stem cells. The donated stem cells may replace the patient's immune cells and help destroy any remaining abnormal cells (graft-versus-tumor effect). Sometimes the transplanted cells from a donor can also make an immune response against the body's normal cells. Giving cyclosporine and mycophenolate mofetil before and after transplant may stop this from happening.
PURPOSE: This phase II trial is studying the side effects of donor umbilical cord blood transplant after cyclophosphamide, fludarabine phosphate, and total-body irradiation in treating patients with hematologic disease.
Full description
OBJECTIVES:
OUTLINE: This is a multicenter study.
Blood and bone marrow samples are collected periodically for analysis.
After completion of study treatment, patients are followed up every 3 months in year 1, every 4 months in year 2, every 6 months until 5 years, and then annually thereafter.
Peer Reviewed and Funded or Endorsed by Cancer Research UK.
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Inclusion and exclusion criteria
DISEASE CHARACTERISTICS:
Diagnosis of high-risk, advanced or poorly responding hematological disease for which a reduced-intensity hemopoietic stem cell transplantation is likely to be effective
No chronic myelogenous leukemia in first chronic phase responding to imatinib or refractory blast crisis
No acute leukemia in morphological relapse/persistent disease (defined as > 5% blasts in normocellular bone marrow)
No malignant disease that is refractory to or progressive on salvage therapy
No myelofibrosis
Donor must be matched at HLA-A and -B at antigen level and HLA-DRB1 at allelic level
PATIENT CHARACTERISTICS:
PRIOR CONCURRENT THERAPY:
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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