ClinicalTrials.Veeva

Menu

Minimizing Toxicity in HLA-identical Sibling Donor Transplantation for Children With Sickle Cell Disease (SUN)

R

Robert Nickel

Status and phase

Enrolling
Phase 2

Conditions

Sickle Cell Disease

Treatments

Drug: Alemtuzumab, low dose total body irradiation, Sirolimus

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT03587272
IRB 10322

Details and patient eligibility

About

This multisite prospective study seeks to determine if HLA-identical sibling donor transplantation using alemtuzumab, low dose total-body irradiation, and sirolimus (Sickle transplant Using a Nonmyeloablative approach, "SUN") can decrease the toxicity of transplant while achieving a high cure rate for children with sickle cell disease (SCD).

Full description

This is a prospective, multicenter phase II study of HLA-identical sibling donor HSCT in 30 pediatric patients with SCD using nonmyeloablative conditioning with alemtuzumab, total-body irradiation, and sirolimus. The primary Objective of this study is to determine if the SUN regimen can decrease the incidence of grade II-IV acute graft-versus host disease (GVHD) by day +100 while maintaining similar disease-free survival compared to establish HLA-identical donor hematopoietic stem cell transplant (HSCT) regimens in children with SCD. The secondary Objective is to determine if health-related quality of life (HRQoL) for children undergoing SUN HSCT is preserved during the early post-transplant time period. To determine if the SUN regimen can decrease the number of platelet transfusions compared to established HLA-identical HSCT regimens in children with SCD. The tertiary/Exploratory Objectives: To describe other markers of toxicity (duration of neutropenia, mucositis, length of hospitalization) and indicators of a successful HSCT (HRQoL at 1 year, proportion needing additional immunosuppression during the first year, proportion able to wean sirolimus at 1 year).

With protocol version 5.0, added new secondary objective to determine if the change from intravenous to subcutaneous alemtuzumab and the addition of post-HSCT G-CSF can decrease the incidence of poor donor engraftment.

Enrollment

100 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

2 to 25 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

Patients with genotypes hemoglobin SS and Sβ0 thalassemia must have at least one of the following:

  • History of an abnormal transcranial Doppler measurement defined as TCD velocity ≥200 cm/sec by the non-imaging technique (or ≥185 cm/sec by the imaging technique) measured at a minimum of two separate occasions.
  • History of cerebral infarction on brain MRI (overt stroke, or silent stroke if ≥3 mm in one dimension, visible in two planes on fluid-attenuated inversion recovery T2-weighted images).
  • History of two or more episodes of acute chest syndrome (ACS) in lifetime.
  • History of three or more SCD pain events requiring treatment with an opiate or IV pain medication (inpatient or outpatient) in lifetime.
  • History of any hospitalization for SCD pain or ACS while receiving hydroxyurea treatment.
  • History of two or more episodes of priapism (erection lasting ≥4 hours or requiring emergent medical care).
  • Administration of regular RBC transfusions (≥8 transfusions in the previous 12 months).
  • At least two episodes of splenic sequestration requiring red blood cell transfusion or splenectomy after at least one episode of splenic sequestration.

Patients with all other sickle genotypes (hemoglobin SC, Sβ+ thalassemia) must have at least one of the following:

  • Clinically significant neurologic event (overt stroke).
  • History of two or more episodes of ACS in the 2-years period preceding enrollment.
  • History of three or more SCD pain events requiring treatment with an opiate or IV pain medication (inpatient or outpatient) in the 1-year period preceding enrollment.
  • History of any hospitalization for SCD pain or ACS while receiving hydroxyurea treatment.
  • History of two or more episodes of priapism (erection lasting ≥4 hours or requiring emergent medical care).
  • Administration of regular RBC transfusions (≥8 transfusions in the previous 12 months).
  • At least two episodes of splenic sequestration requiring red blood cell transfusion or splenectomy after at least one episode of splenic sequestration.

Exclusion criteria

  • General: Life expectancy less than 6 months. Pregnant or breastfeeding patients.
  • Infection Disease: Uncontrolled bacterial, viral or fungal infections (undergoing appropriate treatment and with progression of clinical symptoms) within 1 month prior to conditioning. Patients with febrile illness or suspected minor infection should await clinical resolution prior to starting conditioning. Patients with confirmed seropositivity for HIV and patients with active Hepatitis B or C determined by serology and/or NAAT are excluded.
  • Liver: Direct (conjugated) bilirubin > 1.5 mg/dL, transaminases >5x upper limit of normal for age.
  • Cardiac: Left ventricular shortening fraction <25% or ejection fraction <50% by ECHO.
  • Kidney: Estimated creatinine clearance less than 60 mL/min/1.73m2.
  • Pulmonary function: Diffusion capacity of carbon monoxide (DLCO) <35% (adjusted for hemoglobin). Baseline oxygen saturation <85% or PaO2 <70.
  • Heme: History of RBC alloantibodies against donor RBC antigens (even if current antibody screen is negative). Major ABO incompatibility with donor.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

N/A

Interventional model

Single Group Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

100 participants in 1 patient group

SUN regimen
Experimental group
Description:
Alemtuzumab, low dose total body irradiation, Sirolimus HLA-identical sibling donor transplantation using alemtuzumab, low dose total-body irradiation, and sirolimus (Sickle transplant Using a Nonmyeloablative approach, "SUN") can decrease the toxicity of transplant while achieving a high cure rate for children with sickle cell disease (SCD).
Treatment:
Drug: Alemtuzumab, low dose total body irradiation, Sirolimus

Trial contacts and locations

7

Loading...

Central trial contact

Robert Nickel, MD; Fahmida Hoq, MBBS

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

Clinical trials

Find clinical trialsTrials by location
© Copyright 2026 Veeva Systems