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Stem Cell Transplantation for Patients With Graft Failure Following an Allogeneic Transplant, Using Identical or Near Identical Donors and Less Toxic Conditioning With CAMPATH 1H

Phase I/II Study of Allogeneic Stem Cell Transplantation For Patients With Graft Failure Following Allogeneic Transplantation Using MHC Identical or Near Identical Donors and Submyeloablative Conditioning With CAMPATH 1H (CAMGRAFT)

Status
Terminated
Phases
Phase 1Phase 2
Study type
Interventional
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT00048399
Enrollment
40
Registered
2002-11-01
Start date
2000-12-31
Completion date
2003-10-31
Last updated
2020-01-18

For informational purposes only — not medical advice. Sourced from public registries and may not reflect the latest updates. Terms

Conditions

Graft Failure

Brief summary

To assess the safety, feasibility, and rate of donor engraftment for patients with primary or secondary engraftment failure after treatment with fludarabine and CAMPATH 1H used as a preparative regimen for HLA-identical sibling blood stem cell transplantation (SCT). To assess the safety, feasibility, and rate of donor engraftment for patients with primary or secondary engraftment failure after treatment with fludarabine and CAMPATH 1H as a preparative regimen for matched unrelated or single antigen mismatched family donor marrow transplantation.

Detailed description

Study participants will receive the following treatment: Day -5 to -2...Fludarabine 30mg/m2\* and CAMPATH\*\* 1H 10mg IV Day -1.........Day of rest Day 0..........Stem cell transplant (infusion) Where possible, patients will receive peripheral blood stem cells. When peripheral stem cells are unavailable (e.g. from some unrelated donor centers) or insufficient, bone marrow will be substituted. If peripheral blood stem cell collection is performed, the donor will be stimulated with G-CSF for 5 days and cells collected and frozen until the stem cell target number is obtained prior to the patient beginning the therapy. If a bone marrow harvest is performed, this will be performed on Day 0 (infusion day). After transplantation, G-CSF 5 micrograms/kg/day will be administered SC from day 7 until granulocytes \>1000/ul. Because CAMPATH-1H infusions will provide a persisting level of antibody over the transplant period, it will contribute to anti-GvHD activity. Additional GVHD prophylaxis will consist of FK506 administered IV via continuous infusion over 24 hours from Day-2 until engraftment or when the patient is able to take by mouth, every 12 hours. This is continued until 6 months post-transplantation. The dose is then tapered every 2 weeks until discontinued. All patients will receive supportive care (prophylaxis for antimicrobial, antiviral, antifungal and Pneumocystis Pneumonia, transfusions of blood products and intravenous gamma globulin and routine laboratory testing of chemistry and complete blood counts) as per Cell and Gene Therapy Standard Operating Procedures (SOP). Donor engraftment will be evaluated via standard bone marrow studies (cytogenetics/DNA studies for chimerism) on days 30, 60, 100, 180 and 365 post transplantation. If these studies reveal loss of donor cells on two consecutive studies and/or evidence of relapsing disease, the donor will undergo a peripheral blood stem cell harvest via G-CSF stimulation.

Interventions

DRUGFludarabine
DRUGFK506
PROCEDUREStem Cell Transplantation

Sponsors

The Methodist Hospital Research Institute
CollaboratorOTHER
Baylor College of Medicine
Lead SponsorOTHER

Study design

Allocation
NON_RANDOMIZED
Intervention model
PARALLEL
Primary purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE

Eligibility

Sex/Gender
ALL
Age
No minimum to 64 Years
Healthy volunteers
No

Inclusion criteria

* Diagnosis of engraftment failure either primary or secondary, following allogeneic transplantation. Graft failure is defined as absolute neutrophil count \< 500/mm3 and/or platelet count \< 20,000/mm3. Primary graft failure is defined as failure to maintain absolute neutrophil count \> / = 500/mm3 for 3 consecutive days following allogeneic transplantation. Secondary graft failure is defined as failure to sustain an absolute neutrophil count \> / = 500/mm3 after attainment of primary engraftment or failure to sustain platelet count \> / = 20,000/mm3 despite neutrophil engraftment. For SCID patients, graft failure is defined as failure to recover \> / = 500/mm3 T-cells and/or failure to generate satisfactory response to in vitro mitogen stimulation. For patients with genetic diseases, engraftment failure is defined as donor chimerism insufficient to correct or overcome the genetic or metabolic deficiency. * Available Healthy Donor without any contraindications for donation (5/6 or 6/6 related donor or 5/6 or 6/6 unrelated donor (molecular typing for DRB1) * Age between birth and 65 * For women of childbearing potential, negative pregnancy test

Exclusion criteria

* Pregnant and lactating women or women unwilling to use contraception. * Uncontrolled intercurrent infection * Refractory AML or ALL * Untreated Blast Crisis for CML * Uncontrolled High-grade lymphoproliferative disease/lymphoma * Unstable angina and uncompensated congestive heart failure (Zubrod of 3 or greater) * Severe chronic pulmonary disease requiring oxygen (Zubrod of 3 or greater) * Hemodialysis dependent * Active Hepatitis or cirrhosis with total bilirubin, SGOT, or SGPT greater than 3 x normal. * Concurrent solid organ malignancy not in remission, except for Stage 0 or A prostate cancer. * Unstable Cerebral vascular disease and recent hemorrhagic stroke (less than 6 months) * Active CNS disease from hematological disorder.

Countries

United States

Outcome results

None listed

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov · Data processed: Feb 4, 2026