Beta Thalassemia Clinical Trial
Official title:
A Pilot Study of 5-Azacytidine and Oral Sodium Phenylbutyrate in Severe Thalassemia
This study will evaluate the safety and effectiveness of 5-azacytidine and phenylbutyrate
for treating thalassemia major. Patients with this disease have abnormal production of
hemoglobin (the oxygen-carrying protein in red blood cells), which leads to red blood cell
destruction. As a result, patients require frequent red cell transfusions over many years.
Because of these transfusions, however, excess iron is deposited in various body organs-such
as the heart, liver, thyroid gland and, in men, the testes-impairing their function.
Fetal hemoglobin-a type of hemoglobin that is produced during fetal and infant life-can
substitute for adult hemoglobin and increase the levels of red cells in the body. After
infancy, however, this type of hemoglobin is no longer produced in large quantities.
5-azacytidine can increase fetal hemoglobin levels, but this drug can damage DNA, which in
turn can increase the risk of cancer. This study will try to lessen the harmful effects of
5-azacytidine by using only one or two doses of it, followed by long-term therapy with
phenylbutyrate, a drug that may be as effective as 5-azacytidine with less harmful side
effects.
Patients 18 years of age and older with severe thalassemia major may be eligible for this
study. Before beginning treatment, candidates will have a medical history and physical
examination, blood tests, chest X-ray, electrocardiogram (EKG), bone marrow biopsy (removal
of a small sample of bone marrow from the hip for microscopic examination) and whole-body
magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). For the biopsy, the area of the hip is anesthetized and a
special needle is inserted to draw bone marrow from the hipbone. For the MRI scan, a strong
magnetic field is used to produce images that will identify sites where the body is making
red blood cells. During this procedure, the patient lies on a table in a narrow cylinder
containing a magnetic field. Earplugs are placed in the ears to muffle the loud thumping
sounds the machine makes when the magnetic fields are being switched.
An intravenous (IV) catheter (flexible tube inserted into a vein) is placed in a large vein
of the patient's neck, chest or arm for infusion of 5-azacytidine at a constant rate over 4
days. Patients who do not respond to this first dose of 5-azacytidine will be given the drug
again after about 50 days. If they do not respond to the second dose, alternate treatments
will have to be considered. Patients who respond to 5-azacytidine will begin taking
phenylbutyrate on the 14th day after 5-azacytidine was started. They will take about 10
large pills 3 times a day, continuing for as long as the treatment is beneficial. All
patients will be hospitalized for at least 6 days starting with the beginning of
5-azacytidine therapy. Those who are well enough may then be discharged and continue
treatment as an outpatient.
Patients will be monitored with blood tests daily for 2 weeks and then will be seen weekly
for about another 5 weeks. Bone marrow biopsies will be repeated 6 days after treatment
begins and again at 2 weeks and 7 weeks. MRI will be repeated 7 weeks after treatment
begins. After 7 weeks, patients will be seen at 3-month intervals. Bone marrow biopsies will
be done every 6 months for the first 3 years after treatment. Patients will have red cell
transfusions as needed and chelation therapy to remove excess iron.
Individuals with homozygous beta-thalassemia are either severely anemic or dependent on blood transfusion to sustain life. Deficient synthesis of the beta chain leads to imbalanced chain synthesis with an excess of alpha globin. This alpha globin precipitates, causing ineffective erythropoiesis and shortened red cell survival. In patients with homozygous beta-thalassemia, enhanced gamma globin synthesis could partially compensate for the deficient synthesis of beta globin rendering chain synthesis more balanced and reducing the relative excess of alpha chains. The purpose of this protocol is to test the hypothesis that induction therapy with 5-azacytidine, followed by maintenance treatment with oral phenylbutyrate will enhance gamma globin synthesis, increase red cell production and partially or substantially correct the anemia in patients with homozygous beta-thalassemia. ;
Endpoint Classification: Safety/Efficacy Study, Primary Purpose: Treatment
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