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About
This trial will create a skin graft, which the investigators call "LEAES," using the patient's own skin cells that have been genetically engineered in the lab to express a missing protein called type VII collagen. The corrected cells will be transplanted back to the patient.
Full description
The research project involves gene transfer into keratinocytes, which are the majority of the cells in the outer layer of skin. In this gene transfer trial we plan to biopsy some skin tissue, grow the cells in a skin cell culture (sterile dishes with special fluid that allows cells to grow and multiply) and then infect the cells with a virus that we have genetically engineered to insert the correct type VII collagen gene. The cells should then make type VII collagen.
The process of inserting the correct type VII collagen gene into cells is called "gene transfer." The virus used is called a "retrovirus." The virus is made so that it only delivers the type VII collagen gene and it should not spread to other parts of the body. During the study we will check for growth of the virus.
After cells have received gene transfer, we will grow the cells in culture into a sheet of cells that look like a plastic film. We plan to graft the sheet to wounds. Grafting means we will take cells from the culture and stitch them to the patient's skin.
Enrollment
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Inclusion criteria
Exclusion criteria
Medical instability limiting ability to travel to Stanford University Medical Center
The presence of medical illness expected to complicate participation and/or compromise the safety of this technique, such as active infection with HIV, hepatitis B or hepatitis C, as determined by hepatitis B surface antigen screening, detection of hepatitis C antibodies, or positive result of hepatitis C polymerase chain reaction (PCR) analysis.
Antibodies to type VII collagen associated antigens
Active infection in the area that will undergo grafting
Evidence of systemic infection
Current evidence or a history of squamous cell carcinoma in the area that will undergo grafting
Active drug or alcohol addiction
Hypersensitivity to vancomycin or amikacin
Receipt of chemical or biological study product for the specific treatment of RDEB in the past six months
Positive pregnancy test or breast-feeding
Clinically significant abnormalities (Grade 2 or higher on the National Cancer Institute [NCI] toxicity scale) on laboratory tests performed prior to grafting, except for the following specific exclusionary laboratory threshold results, subject to approval or exemption by the EB physician:
Clinically significant abnormalities (Grade 2 or higher on the NCI toxicity scale) identified through medical history and physical examination on Day 0, with the following exceptions:
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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