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Safety Study of Preimplantation Factor (PIF-1) to Treat Acute Steroid-Resistant Graft-Versus-Host Disease (GVHD) (PIF1GVHD)

H

Hadassah Medical Center

Status and phase

Unknown
Phase 1

Conditions

Graft Vs Host Disease

Treatments

Drug: Preimplantation factor (PIF-1)

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other
Industry

Identifiers

NCT00517907
PIF1BMT-HMO-CTIL

Details and patient eligibility

About

The primary goal of this study is to determine the safety and tolerability of a novel peptide - preimplantation factor (PIF-1) - in patients who develop acute steroid-resistant graft-versus-host disease (GVHD) after matched bone marrow transplant (BMT).

Following matched BMT, patients will be placed on standard GVHD preventive therapy (cyclosporine); those who do not respond to cyclosporine are placed on a high-dose steroid regimen for 3 days. Patients that do not respond to this standard treatment will be given PIF-1 subcutaneously for 14 days.

Clinical data and samples will be collected, during PIF-1 administration and for an additional three months thereafter, to examine the long-term effect of PIF-1 treatment on the patients' GVHD status.

Full description

Allogeneic BMT is a well-established treatment modality for malignant and non-malignant hematological diseases. Mature donor T cells within the stem-cell graft are the main mediators of the beneficial immune effects, but they are also responsible for the induction of GVHD, which becomes the major cause of morbidity and mortality post-transplant. Acute GVHD occurs within a 100-day period post-transplant and generally is manifested by dermatitis, enteritis, and hepatitis. The treatment of GVHD continues to be a challenge. To eliminate undesirable host-derived hematopoietic elements before BMT, patients are traditionally treated with myeloablative conditioning regimens involving high-dose chemotherapy and total-body irradiation. Standard GVHD prophylaxis and therapy comprise drugs that cause generalized immune suppression and place patients in danger of opportunistic infections and tumor relapse. For acute GVHD prevention, cyclosporine is often used; however, it is frequently necessary to administer long-term high-dose steroids as well.

An acute GVHD patient's lack of response to steroids is associated with poor prognosis. The ideal prophylaxis treatment for BMT patients would be one that prevented the graft from attacking the host, and that modulated the host's immune response so that it would accept the transplant, while maintaining its ability to protect the body against opportunistic hostile agents.

Pregnancy is an immune paradox: it allows maternal (host) acceptance of a semi-allograft (embryo), while it does not cause graft-versus-host or host-versus-graft reactions against the host/mother, or immune suppression. Therefore, the pregnant immunological status is compatible with the desired immune profile in patients undergoing BMT. By replicating the immune profile present in pregnancy in BMT patients, we may be able to reduce the occurrence of GVHD-related morbidity and mortality rates.

Preimplantation factor (PIF-1) is a novel, embryo-secreted peptide whose synthetic version matches the native peptide's properties. PIF-1 appears to play an important role in mediating the maternal response to pregnancy in mammals. In preclinical studies, PIF-1 has been found to be effective in preclinical BMT-GVHD models, without apparent toxicity.

Enrollment

6 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

14 to 70 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Acute steroid-resistant GVHD post matched BMT

Exclusion criteria

  • Morbidity unrelated to GVHD

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

N/A

Interventional model

Single Group Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

6 participants in 1 patient group

1
Experimental group
Description:
6 steroid-resistant acute GVHD patients, post-matched BMT (serial)
Treatment:
Drug: Preimplantation factor (PIF-1)

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Reuven Or, MD

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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