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About
RATIONALE: Giving chemotherapy, such as busulfan, fludarabine, and melphalan, before a donor umbilical cord blood stem cell transplant helps stop the growth of abnormal or cancer cells and prepares the patient's bone marrow for the stem 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 cyclosporine and mycophenolate mofetil may stop this from happening.
PURPOSE: This phase II trial is studying how well combination chemotherapy followed by a donor umbilical cord blood transplant works in treating infants with high-risk acute leukemia or myelodysplastic syndromes.
Full description
OBJECTIVES:
Primary
Secondary Objectives
Transplant Related Objectives
Enrollment
Sex
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Inclusion criteria
Matched sibling donor (HLA 8/8), if available, or a unrelated partially HLA matched single unit based on the following priority:
Patients aged ≤ 3 years at diagnosis (not age of transplant) with hematological malignancy as detailed below:
Acute myeloid leukemia: high risk CR1 as evidenced by:
Myelodysplasia (MDS) IPSS Int-2 or High risk (i.e. RAEB, RAEBt) or refractory anemia with severe pancytopenia or high risk cytogenetics. Blasts must be < 10% by a representative bone marrow aspirate morphology.
Persistent or rising minimal residual disease (MRD) after standard chemotherapy regimens: Patients with evidence of minimal residual disease at the completion of therapy or evidence of rising MRD while on therapy. MRD will be defined by either flow cytometry (>0.1% residual cells in the blast gate with immune phenotype of original leukemic clone), by molecular techniques (PCR or FISH) or conventional cytogenetics (g-banding).
New Leukemia Subtypes: A major effort in the field of pediatric hematology is to identify patients who are of high risk for treatment failure so that patients can be appropriately stratified to either more (or less) intensive therapy. This effort is continually ongoing and retrospective studies identify new disease features or characteristics that are associated with treatment outcomes. Therefore, if new high risk features are identified after the writing of this protocol, patients can be enrolled with the approval of two members of the study committee.
Recipients must have a Lansky score ≥ 50% and have acceptable organ function defined as:
Voluntary written informed consent before performance of any study-related procedure not part of normal medical care.
Exclusion criteria
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
34 participants in 2 patient groups
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Central trial contact
Christen Ebens, MD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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