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The purpose of this study is to measure the concentration of cells and proteins in the patient's blood during administration of Nuopogen (Filgrastim), a medication that is FDA approved for stem cell mobilization, in combination with a programmed pneumatic compression device (PPCD) (Art-Assist Device). The Art-Assist Device is an FDA approved device that promotes blood flow in the patient's legs. A patient will be prescribed this device and this drug to help improve the poor circulation in his/her leg. The use of Nuopogen along with the Art-Assist Device has not been approved by the FDA and is considered experimental.
This study is not designed to find out how well the Art-Assist Device works, nor how well the drug works in mobilizing stem cells. Instead, it is a study of how well cells lining blood vessels in calf respond to increases in shear stress, and how well the increase in the population of certain cells in the blood stream effect how the new blood vessels will form. It is important for clinical reasons, and for the purposes of this study, that the patient uses the Art-Assist Device as prescribed on a daily basis as discussed with the patient's doctor
Full description
This protocol is the next clinical step in our biochemical assessment of a cell therapy approach to treat Chronic Limb Threatening Ischemia (CLI). Briefly, the capability to enlarge collateral arteries ("arteriogenesis"), and to stimulate growth of new capillaries, arterioles and venules at the tissue level ("angiogenesis") is innate. Investigators attribute the failure for this to occur in CLI to the ischemic environment. In our first protocol investigators used an external programmed pneumatic compression device (Art-Assist Device) to improve hemodynamics in the limb and most importantly to provide the "on-switch" to activate the endothelium so arteriogenesis can begin. This new protocol provides the second step in improving this environment; improving the cellular deficit and protein signaling. Investigators are seeking the proteomic, biochemical, and cytometry data needed to refine the approach so a clinical trial can be performed. This project will use FDA approved and CMS reimbursed products.
Rationale
Neovascularization in CLI fails for hemodynamic ("A") and cellular ("B") reasons:
A) The hemodynamic failure caused by multi-level arterial occlusive disease leads to:
C) Impaired immunity. Even when blood flow is improved there is a population of patients that still succumb to infection. Part of this relates to poor wound management, the other is impaired immunity.
Our cell therapy approach is designed to address each of these. Specifically:
A) The hemodynamic failure caused by multi-level arterial occlusive disease will be corrected by wearing the ACI device that
B) The deficiency in the circulating progenitor cell population will be corrected:
G-CSF (Nuopogen, Amgen Inc.) is FDA approved for progenitor/stem cell mobilization. It has been used clinically as stand-alone neovascularization therapy. Investigators will use it in this protocol to correct the deficiency in this vital cell population in CLI patients, enhancing arteriogenesis and angiogenesis. Investigators will measure its biochemical impact.
C) The Impaired immunity will be addressed G-CSF (Nuopogen, Amgen Inc.) is FDA approved for correcting the immunological deficit following cytotoxic chemotherapy. CLI occurs in elderly, often diabetic, patients with impaired immunity. Amputations result when infections arise in the forefoot and reach the mid-foot.
Our hypothesis: is that the combined use of a PPCD and G-CSF will promote arteriogenesis. Investigators have limited but strong clinical evidence that this combined approach dramatically improves blood flow. The recently completed IRB project (IRB#12-1198) focused on the biochemistry of the PPCD. The present submission addresses the biochemical impact of the PPCD and G-CSF together.
B.OBJECTIVES:
Specific Aim 1: is to measure the influence of progenitor cell mobilization on the PPCD proteomic profile investigators derived during our recently completed protocol (IRB # 12-1198). Ten CLI patients will be enrolled. All will wear the PPCD as before. All will receive 10 mcg/kg of Filgrastim (Nuopogen, Amgen Inc.) for a total of 5 doses. The FDA approved indication is stem cell mobilization. The dosimetry is less aggressive than the product label as the dosimetry is being spread out to once every 72 hours rather than once a day. The FDA has granted the PI an IND waiver for this dosing interval. As with our first protocol, cytometry will yield the distribution of progenitor CD34+ and VEGFR2+ cells and monocytes (CD14+). The distribution of mature circulating endothelial cells (CD31+) cells will be measured as a reference point. As with our first protocol investigators will do a proteomic survey measuring levels of cytokines associated with arteriogenesis, as well as serum nitrite (reflection of nitric oxide synthase activity).
Specific Aim 2: investigators will examine the association between these biochemical data, hemodynamic testing, and clinical course (alleviation or progression of forefoot ischemic rest pain and ischemic forefoot wounds) over a 6 month interval.
Study Design: Ten CLI patients with ischemic forefoot rest pain, non-healing forefoot ulceration, or dry forefoot gangrene will be recruited. They will have already undergone standard of care evaluation, including hemodynamic testing and duplex ultrasound delineation of the arterial anatomy in the Non-invasive Vascular Laboratory. Those with tibial artery occlusive disease, with normal or corrected proximal aorto-ilio-femoral arterial anatomy, will be given the option of enrollment in lieu of surgery or catheter revascularization. PPCD use will continue until the presenting symptoms resolve or traditional revascularization becomes necessary to achieve limb salvage. The only three amendments to our first IRB submission (IRB#12-1198) are:
Baseline visit (Vascular Surgery Clinic):
Day1 (at the CRC; Clinical Research Center, University of Chicago): The following procedures will be done in this order:
Days 4, 7, 10, and 13 (at Home or in clinic): The following procedures will be done:
Day14 (at the CRC; Clinical Research Center, University of Chicago): The following procedures will be done in this order:
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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