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This research is being done to learn more about reduced-intensity bone marrow transplantation (BMT), also known as a "mini" transplant for patients with blood cancers, using bone marrow from a relative.
The main goal of the study is to determine how quickly the donor's bone marrow "takes" in your body. Other goals include describing how many people accept the bone marrow and how quickly the blood counts come up; describing Graft-versus-host disease (GVHD) and other complications; and describing how many people survive without progressive cancer and survive overall
Full description
At the present time there are few or no cures for people with cancer of the blood or lymph glands outside of a bone marrow transplant (BMT). BMT has developed over several decades of research as an effective treatment of various malignant and nonmalignant hematologic diseases.
This research is being done to learn more about reduced-intensity bone marrow transplantation (BMT), also known as a "mini" transplant for patients with blood cancers, using bone marrow from a relative. The bone marrow for this transplant comes from a relative who is a half-match or "haplo" match to you. Possible donors include parents, siblings, and children.
"Mini" transplants have been given to many people with various cancers but are considered experimental. Over 200 people at Johns Hopkins have received mini transplants with high doses of cyclophosphamide after the transplant. However, the chemotherapy combination and other treatment given before those transplants were different from what is in this study. Although all of the chemotherapy and immune-lowering drugs used in this study are approved by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA), the combination of medications used in this study are not FDA approved and are experimental.
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Inclusion criteria
First-degree related donor who is at minimum HLA haploidentical
Eligible diagnoses:
Low-grade non-Hodgkin's lymphoma or plasma cell neoplasm that has progressed during multiagent therapy, failed at least two prior therapies (excluding single agent rituximab and single agent steroids), or in the case of lymphoma undergone histological conversion:
Poor-risk SLL or CLL, defined by an 11q or 17p deletion, histological conversion, or disease progression < 6 months after a purine analog-containing regimen
Aggressive lymphoma that has failed at least one prior regimen of multiagent chemotherapy, and patient is either ineligible for autologous BMT or autologous BMT is not recommended:
Relapsed or refractory acute leukemia in second or subsequent remission
Poor-risk acute leukemia in first remission
AML with at least one of the following:
AML arising from MDS or a myeloproliferative disorder, or secondary AML
Presence of Flt3 internal tandem duplications
Poor-risk cytogenetics
Primary refractory disease
Adverse cytogenetics
Clear evidence of hypodiploidy
Primary refractory disease
Interferon- or imatinib-refractory CML in first chronic phase, or non-blast crisis CML beyond first chronic phase
Philadelphia chromosome negative myeloproliferative disease (including myelofibrosis)
Chronic myelomonocytic leukemia
Juvenile myelomonocytic leukemia
Left ventricular ejection fraction greater than or equal to 35%
Bilirubin ≤ 3.0 mg/dL (unless due to Gilbert's syndrome or hemolysis), and ALT and AST < 5 x ULN
FEV1 and FVC > 40% of predicted; or in pediatric patients, if unable to perform pulmonary function tests due to young age, oxygen saturation >92% on room air
Exclusion criteria
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15 participants in 1 patient group
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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