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Clinical Trial Details — Status: Completed

Administrative data

NCT number NCT00078533
Other study ID # 12683-VICTA
Secondary ID VICTAPACT 001
Status Completed
Phase Phase 1
First received March 1, 2004
Last updated October 6, 2014
Start date April 2004
Est. completion date June 2011

Study information

Verified date June 2014
Source Baylor College of Medicine
Contact n/a
Is FDA regulated No
Health authority United States: Food and Drug AdministrationUnited States: Institutional Review Board
Study type Interventional

Clinical Trial Summary

Patients have a type of blood cell cancer, other blood disease or a genetic disease for which they will receive a stem cell transplant. The donor of the stem cells will be either a brother or sister or another relative or a closely matched unrelated donor. We are asking patients to participate in this study which tests if blood cells from the donor that have been grown in a special way, can prevent the patients from getting an infection with a virus called Cytomegalovirus or CMV.

CMV is a virus that can cause serious infections in patients with suppressed immune systems. It usually affects the lungs and can cause a very serious pneumonia, but it can also affect the intestinal tract, the liver and the eyes. Approximately 2/3 of normal people harbor this virus in their body. In healthy people CMV rarely causes any problems because the immune system can keep it under control. If the patient and/or their donor is positive for CMV, they are at risk of developing CMV disease while the patients immune system is weak post transplant. Usually, this risk is highest during the first 3-4 months after the transplant.

CMV disease can be prevented during this time in most people by using drugs that can kill the virus such as Ganciclovir, Foscarnet, or Cidofovir . However, these medications have many side effects and have to be given daily by vein for approximately 4-5 months after transplant. One of the side effects is that it takes the new immune system much longer to develop an effective defense against the virus. Therefore, once the medicines are stopped, the patients still have a chance to develop CMV disease.

We want to see if we can use a kind of white blood cell called T cells that we have grown from the stem cell donor instead of the regular treatment with Ganciclovir or Foscarnet to prevent CMV from "flaring up". These cells have been trained to attack CMV virus infected cells. We will grow these T cells from blood taken from the donor before the patients transplant. These cells are called CMV-specific cytotoxic T-lymphocytes or CMV CTL, and they will be given to the patient around 30 days after their transplant.

We have used this sort of therapy to treat a different virus which can cause problems after transplant called Epstein Barr Virus (EBV). Doctors at other places have used similar T cells to treat or prevent CMV infections after transplant and have not seen any significant problems. These CMV specific cytotoxic T cells are an investigational product not approved by the Food and Drug Administration.


Description:

If the patient and their donor are eligible, we will take 100-120 ml (20-24 teaspoonfuls) of blood from the donor 3-4 weeks before the transplant. We will only take as much blood as is safe for the patient and their donor.

We will use this blood to grow T cells. We will first infect the peripheral blood mononuclear cells with a specially produced human virus adenovirus) that carries part of the CMV gene to the monocytes which will stimulate the T cells. This stimulation will train the T cells to kill cells with the pp65 from the CMV virus on their surface. If this approach is insufficient to stimulate T cells which will kill the pp65 from the CMV virus then we will grow a special type of cell called dendritic cells which will stimulate the T cells and we will put the specially produced human virus (adenovirus) that carries the parts of the CMV gene (called pp65) into the dendritic cells. These dendritic cells will then be treated with radiation so they cannot grow. They will then be used to stimulate T cells. This stimulation will train the T cells to kill cells with the pp65 from the CMV virus on their surface.

We will then grow these CMV specific CTLs by more stimulation with EBV infected cells (which we will make from the blood of the donor by infecting them with EBV in the laboratory). We will also put the adenovirus that carries the CMV pp65 gene into these EBV infected cells so that they too have CMVpp65. These EBV infected cells will be treated with radiation so they cannot grow. Once we have made sufficient numbers of T cells we will test them to make sure they kill cells with CMVpp65 on their surface. To make sure that these cells won't attack the patients tissues, we test these cells against the lymphoblasts that we grow in the laboratory. These will be used to check if the CMV CTL can attack them. Alternatively, we could take a small piece of skin from the patient to grow skin cells which can also be used to check if CMV CTL can attack them. The skin biopsy can be done at the same time of another procedure such as a bone marrow.

The donor's CMV CTL cells will be thawed and injected into the patients intravenous line for a period of 10 minutes after the patient received Benadryl and Tylenol. The patient will receive the dose of CMV CTL cells on or after day 30 following their transplant if they agree and are well enough. We will not give antiviral medications during this study but we will monitor the CMV levels weekly for at least 30 days after the transplant. If after the initial dose of CMV CTL cells the patient develops a viral infection, then they may be eligible to receive one additional injection of CTLs at the same dose as the first injection. If the CMV levels in the blood continue to rise after the dose of T cells then the patient will receive treatment with Ganciclovir, Foscarnet, or Cidofuvir.

The patient will continue to be followed in the BMT clinic after the injection. They will be seen in the clinic, in the hospital or contacted by the research nurse and have blood tests (to monitor the blood counts, the kidney and liver function and to monitor for viruses) weekly for the first 60 days after the CTL infusion, then at 3, 6, 9 and 12 months. To learn more about the way the T cells are working in the body, an extra 20-40 mls (4-8 teaspoons) of blood will be taken before the infusion and then 24 hours after the infusion (optional depending on the patients preference), and then at 1, 2, 4 and 6 weeks after the infusion. After this, blood will be taken every 3 months for 1 year. The amount of blood taken in the first 12 months will be 260-460mls (1-2 cups). Total time participation for this study will be 1 year.


Recruitment information / eligibility

Status Completed
Enrollment 26
Est. completion date June 2011
Est. primary completion date July 2010
Accepts healthy volunteers No
Gender Both
Age group N/A and older
Eligibility Inclusion criteria:

- Recipients of allogeneic donor stem cell transplants at risk for CMV reactivation with a CMV seropositive stem cell donor and at least 30 days post transplant.

- Recipients can have early evidence of CMV reactivation with greater than 2 leukocytes but less than 10 leukocytes positive for the CMV Ag per 100,000 cells.

- No evidence of graft-versus-host disease (GVHD) > Grade II at time of enrollment.

- Life expectancy > 30 days

- No severe intercurrent infections

- Lansky/Karnofsky scores greater than or equal to 60

- Absence of severe renal disease (Creatinine > x 3 normal for age)

- Absence of severe hepatic disease (direct bilirubin > 3 mg/dl or SGOT > 500)

- Not receiving Ganciclovir, Foscarnet, or Cidofovir or other antiviral therapy for CMV reactivation

- Patient/guardian able to give informed consent

Exclusion Criteria:

- Patients with CMV negative stem cell donors

- Patients with GVHD Grades III-IV

- Patients receiving antiviral therapy for CMV reactivation or other viral infections such as adenovirus or herpes viruses

- Patients with significant CMV reactivation. Significant CMV reactivation is defined as one CMV Antigenemia reading with >10 leukocytes positive for the CMV Ag per 100,000 cells

- Patients with less than 50% donor chimerism in either peripheral blood or bone marrow or patients with relapse of original disease

Study Design

Endpoint Classification: Safety/Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Single Group Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Treatment


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


Intervention

Biological:
CMV CTL infusion
Three dose levels will be explored. The lowest dose level will be 1x10^7cells/m2 and the highest will be 1x10^8/m2. 3-6 pts will be entered at each dose level (depending on toxicity). If there are no toxicities and immunological efficacy is not seen at any dose, then the doses will be further escalated after additional local and federal approval. Additional patients will be treated at dose level 1 in order to assess the secondary objective of virus-specific immunity from the CTL infusions

Locations

Country Name City State
United States Houston Methodist Hospital Houston Texas
United States Texas Children's Hospital Houston Texas

Sponsors (5)

Lead Sponsor Collaborator
Baylor College of Medicine Center for Cell and Gene Therapy, Baylor College of Medicine, National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI), Texas Children's Hospital, The Methodist Hospital System

Country where clinical trial is conducted

United States, 

Outcome

Type Measure Description Time frame Safety issue
Primary safety, toxicity and maximum tolerated dose (MTD) 30 days Yes
Primary Efficacy of recovery of virus-specific immunity and correlation with protection from viral reactivation/disease. 8 weeks No
See also
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Completed NCT01325636 - Injection of CD4 and CD8 + T Cells Anti-Cytomegalovirus (CMV) or Anti-adenovirus Phase 1/Phase 2
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Active, not recruiting NCT05089630 - A Study of Safety and Immune Response to Different Doses of a Cytomegalovirus Vaccine in Healthy Adults Phase 1/Phase 2
Not yet recruiting NCT06058858 - Incidence and Risks Factors of CMV Reactivation in Patients Receiving of CAR-T Cells for Acute Leukemia and Lymphoma Relapse, a Cohort Study Analysis
Active, not recruiting NCT04904614 - Letermovir Use in Heart Transplant Recipients Phase 4
Completed NCT01986010 - Safety, Tolerability, and Immunogenicity of the Human Cytomegalovirus Vaccine (V160) in Healthy Adults (V160-001) Phase 1