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The purpose of this study is to evaluate the safety and effectiveness of lentiviral gene transfer treatment at restoring immune function to participants with X-linked severe combined immunodeficiency (XSCID) who are 2 to 40 years of age, and have significant impairment of immunity.
Full description
This study will evaluate the safety and effectiveness of lentiviral gene transfer treatment at restoring immune function to participants with X-linked severe combined immunodeficiency (XSCID) who are 2 to 40 years of age, and have significant impairment of immunity. XSCID is a severe genetic condition of the immune system.
Participants in this study will be treated at the National Institutes of Health (NIH) Clinical Center.
Before the gene transfer treatment, a participant's own CD34+ hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) will have been or will be collected from the participant's blood or bone marrow. When the participant has the required number of HSCs harvested, then the participant's HSCs will be grown in tissue culture and exposed to the lentiviral gene transfer vector containing the corrective gene (VSV-G pseudotyped CL20-4i-EF1α-hγc-OPT). These gene corrected HSCs will be administered by intravenous (IV) infusion to the participant. To increase engraftment of the corrected HSCs, participants will receive a chemotherapy drug called busulfan on 2 days before the gene transfer treatment. Participants will also receive palifermin, which helps prevent mucositis, which is the main side effect from the busulfan.
After the gene transfer treatment, participants will be monitored to see if the treatment is safe and whether their immune system improves. Participants will be followed at frequent intervals for the first 2 years, and less frequently thereafter so that the effectiveness in restoration of immune function and the safety of the treatment can be evaluated. Additional safety follow-up may occur through Year 15.
Enrollment
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Inclusion criteria
A proven mutation in the common gamma chain gene as defined by direct sequencing of patient DNA
Human leukocyte antigen (HLA) typing of the patient will have been performed before enrollment
No available HLA matched sibling donor as determined before enrollment.
Must be between 2 and 40 years of age and weigh 10 kg
If previously transplanted, must be 18 months post-hematopoietic stem cell transplant (HSCT)
Expected survival of at least 120 days.
Documented to be negative for HIV infection by genome polymerase chain reaction (PCR)
The patient must be judged by the primary evaluating physician to have a suitable family and social situation consistent with ability to comply with protocol procedures and the long-term follow-up requirements.
Medical lab data (historical) of severe B cell dysfunction (low or absent immunoglobulin G [IgG] levels, failed immune response to vaccines); OR demonstrated requirement for intravenous gamma globulin (IVIG) (significant drop over 3 to 6 weeks between peak and trough IgG levels).
Must be willing to have blood and tissue samples stored. IN ADDITION, patients must satisfy the following Laboratory Criteria AND Clinical Criteria:
Laboratory Criteria: (at least 1 must be present)
Clinical Criteria: (at least 1 must be present)
i. Infections (not including molluscum, warts or mucocutaneous candidiasis; see vii and viii below): 3 significant new or chronic active infections during the 2 years preceding evaluation for enrollment, with each infection accounting for one criteria. Infections are defined as an objective sign of infection (fever greater than 38.3^0C [101^0F] or neutrophilia or pain/redness/swelling or radiologic/ultrasound imaging evidence or typical lesion or histology or new severe diarrhea or cough with sputum production). In addition to one or more of these signs/symptoms of possible infection, there also must be at least 1 of the following criteria as evidence of the attending physician's "intent to treat" a significant infection (a. and b.) or objective evidence for a specific pathogen causing the infection (c.)
ii. Chronic pulmonary disease as defined by:
iii. Gastrointestinal enteropathy:
iv. Poor nutrition: Requires gastrostomy tube (G-tube) or intravenous feeding supplement to maintain weight or nutrition.
v. Auto- or allo-immunity: Examples must include objective physical findings that include, but are not limited to any one of alopecia, severe rashes, uveitis, joint pain with redness or swelling or limitation of movement that is not a result of infection, lupus-like lesions, and granulomas (Does not include auto- or allo-immune enteropathy which is criterion iii). Where possible and appropriate, diagnosis will be supported by histopathology or other diagnostic modality.
vi. Failure to grow in height: 3rd percentile for age
vii. Skin molluscum contagiosum OR warts (this criterion is satisfied if molluscum consists of 10 lesions or there are two or more lesions at each of two or more widely separated anatomic sites; or there are 3 warts at different anatomic sites at the same time; or the patient has both molluscum and warts)
viii. Mucocutaneous candidiasis (chronic oral thrush or candida esophagitis or candida intertriginous infection or candida nail infections; must be culture positive to satisfy this criterion)
ix. Hypogammaglobulinemia: requires regular IgG supplementation
Exclusion criteria
Primary purpose
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13 participants in 1 patient group
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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