- Patients with active (grade 2-4) acute graft vs. host disease (GVHD), chronic GVHD or an overt autoimmune disease (e.g. hemolytic anemia) requiring high doses of glucocorticosteroid (>0.5 mg/kg/day prednisone or its equivalent) as treatment.
- Patients with other conditions not related to leukemic relapse (e.g. veno-occlusive disease or uncontrolled bacterial, viral or invasive fungal infection) which are also life-threatening and which would preclude evaluation of the effects of a T cell infusion.
- Patients who are pregnant.
Donor Eligibility for Donation of Blood Lymphocytes for Generation of Donor-Derived WT-1-Specific T Cells.
The eligibility criteria for the donor of blood to be used to generate WT1 peptide sensitized T cells are:
- The donor of WT-1 specific T. lymphocytes will be the same donor who provided the patient's hematopoietic stem cell transplant (HSCT). These normal donors will be evaluated for evidence of prior sensitization to EBV by EBV serology. If the donor is seropositive, and donor T cells are sensitized with the donor's WT-1 peptide- loaded EBV transformed B cells, EBV-specific T-cells will also be generated from seropositive donors generating WT-1 specific T-cells, and their growth and persistence post transfer will be compared to that of the WT 1 specific T-cells.
- Since the donor will have already undergone an extensive evaluation of his/her health to ascertain eligibility for donating the patient's HSCT, re-evaluation for this blood donation will be limited to a clinical history, physical examination and blood tests to insure against any new condition which, in the opinion of the donor's physician, preclude the donor from donating the blood required.
- New health conditions which would exclude a transplant donor from a second blood donation are limited, but include:
- New onset of an HIV infection
- Other uncontrolled infection which could be transmitted to the patient by blood cells and would place the patient at significant increased risk of severe morbidity or death.
- Significant anemia with Hgb < than or equal to 10 gm/dl, persisting since the time of the original transplant donation.
- History of myocardial infarction or stroke since the time of HSCT donation which might increase the risk of blood donation. A perspective donor will be informed of the purposes of this study, and its requirements. If he/she consents, the donor will be requested to provide two blood samplings.
- An initial donation of 25ml blood anticoagulated with heparin or ACD. This blood is used to establish a B cell line transfused transformed with the B95.8 laboratory strains of EBV. This EBV+ B cell line/ (EBVBLCL) will be used as an antigen-presenting cell. When loaded with the pool of WT-1 pentadecapeptides, the EBVBLCL efficiently sensitize T cells from the same donors against WT-1 as well as EBV.
Because the establishment and testing of an EBV transformed B cell line suitable for use as an antigen-presenting cell require 4-5 weeks of in vitro culture, it is important that this sample be obtained as early as possible for patients at risk for leukemic relapse, since disease relapse most frequently occurs 2-6 months post transplant. Accordingly, this blood sample should be obtained from the donor prior to donation of the hematopoietic progenitor cell transplant whenever possible.
- A donation of either a single standard 2 blood volume leukapheresis collected in standard ACD anticoagulant. If it is impossible to collect a leukapheresis from some of the donors, a unit of whole blood will be accepted by the AICTF (Adoptive Immune Cell Therapy Facility manufacturing the clinical grade cell products under GMP conditions in MSKCC) for the generation of limited number of T cells. This blood is required for isolation of the T cells to be sensitized with the pool of WT-1 15-mers loaded on autologous dendritic cells or autologous EBVBLCL, and propagated in vitro. In addition, it is required to provide autologous feeder cells essential to sustain T-cell growth without the risk of stimulating the growth of alloreactive T-cells capable of inducing GVHD.
- This donation of a leukapheresis or a unit of blood will be obtained from unrelated HSCT donors at least 2 weeks after their donation of an HSCT, but soon thereafter as possible.
In addition to providing written consent to these donations of blood for the purpose of generating WT-1-specific T-cells for potential use in the treatment of recurrent leukemia or persistent residual disease developing in the patient for whom the donor has provided an HSCT, each donor will be informed of and asked to provide separate consent to each of the following potential applications of the blood cells donated:
- The use of a fraction of the cells isolated to generate immune T-cells specific for viruses, such as Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) and cytomegalovirus (CMV) ,that can cause lethal infections or lymphomas in transplant recipients. Such T-cells could then be used, under separate protocols, to treat EBV-associated diseases (IRB 95-024) and/or to treat CMV infections (IRB 05-065) in the patient receiving the donor's hematopoietic progenitor cell transplant.
Consenting to this application will limit the number of blood donations that would be required of any donor, since the white cells donated in a leukapheresis should provide enough cells to grow immune T-cells against WT-1, EBV and CMV.
The donation of immune T-cells specific for EBV or CMV generated from the donor that are not used for or required by the patient for whom they were originally intended to a bank of immune cells that will be started and maintained cryopreserved under GMP conditions in the Adoptive Immune Cell Therapy Facility at MSKCC, for potential use in the treatment of other patients with EBV lymphomas or cytomegalovirus infections that express HLA alleles shared by the donor.