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RATIONALE: Giving chemotherapy before a donor bone marrow transplant helps stop the growth of cancer cells. It also helps stop the patient's immune system from rejecting the donor's stem cells. Also, monoclonal antibodies, such as alemtuzumab, can find cancer cells and either kill them or deliver cancer-killing substances to them without harming normal cells. When the healthy stem cells from a donor are infused into the patient they may help the patient's bone marrow make stem cells, red blood cells, white blood cells, and platelets. Sometimes the transplanted cells from a donor can make an immune response against the body's normal cells. Giving methotrexate, cyclosporine and mycophenolate mofetil after the transplant may stop this from happening. Once the donated stem cells begin working, the patient's immune system may see the remaining cancer cells as not belonging in the patient's body and destroy them (called graft-versus-tumor effect). Giving an infusion of the donor's white blood cells (donor lymphocyte infusion) may boost this effect.
PURPOSE: This phase I/II trial is studying the side effects of giving fludarabine together with cyclophosphamide and to see how well they work in treating patients who are undergoing donor stem cell transplant for B-cell chronic lymphocytic leukemia or Waldenström's macroglobulinemia.
Full description
OBJECTIVES:
Primary
Secondary
OUTLINE: This is a multicenter, open-label, nonrandomized, pilot study.
NOTE: *Patients who did not achieve partial response after cytoreductive therapy receive regimen 3.
Regimen 1: Patients receive fludarabine IV and cyclophosphamide IV on days -7 to -3. If stem cells are collected from an unrelated donor, patients also receive anti-thymocyte globulin (ATG) IV on days -4 to -1.
Regimen 2: Patients undergo total-body irradiation on day -9. Patients then receive alemtuzumab IV on days -8 to -4 and fludarabine IV and cyclophosphamide IV on days -6 to -2.
Regimen 3: Patients receive fludarabine IV on days -7 to -3, busulfan IV or orally on days -7 to -5, and cyclophosphamide IV on days -3 to -2. If stem cells are collected from an unrelated donor, patients also receive ATG on days -3 to -1.
After completion of study treatment, patients are followed periodically.
PROJECTED ACCRUAL: A total of 70 patients will be accrued for this study.
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Inclusion and exclusion criteria
DISEASE CHARACTERISTICS:
Diagnosis of B-cell chronic lymphocytic leukemia or lymphoplasmocytic lymphoma (Waldenstrom's macroglobulinemia)
Must have poor prognostic features and low probability of successful autografting, defined by one of the following criteria:
Progressive disease with unfavorable cytogenetics (deletion or mutation of critical regions on chromosomes 11q and/or 17p [p53]; and/or unmutated status of the immunoglobulin V_H gene region; and/or usage of the V_H 3-21 gene), defined as 1 of the following:
Refractory disease or early relapse (within 12 months) after treatment with a fludarabine-containing regimen
Relapsed after autologous stem cell transplant (SCT)
Insufficient stem cell harvest for intended autologous SCT
Presence of a clonal CDR III rearrangement detected by polymerase chain reaction
No Richter's syndrome
HLA-identical sibling or unrelated donor available
PATIENT CHARACTERISTICS:
PRIOR CONCURRENT THERAPY:
Primary purpose
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Interventional model
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100 participants in 1 patient group
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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