Acute Myeloid Leukemia Clinical Trial
Official title:
A Pilot Study of Intraosseous Infusion of Unrelated Cord Blood Grafts
In this trial the investigators seek to determine if injecting cord blood cells directly
into the bone marrow (intraosseous injection), rather than infusing them intravenously, can
improve engraftment. The rational for doing this is that most hematopoietic stem cells
(HSCs) infused intravenously never reach the bone marrow, getting trapped by other organs,
such as the lungs, instead. The potential advantage of intraosseous infusion is suggested by
studies in rodents that have demonstrated that in HSC transplants where the cell dose is
limiting intraosseous injection is a more effective route of administration. The safety of
intraosseous injections, in general, is underscored by the vast experience using
intraosseous injections for resuscitation of critically ill children. The safety of
injecting HSCs intraosseously has been demonstrated in a clinical trial of transplanting
bone marrow cells.
To safeguard against problems that might result, if intraosseous infusion fails to improve
engraftment in this trial, the investigators will integrate a recently introduced strategy
proven to improve engraftment-the transplantation of two cord blood units. Transplanting two
unrelated cord blood units by intravenous infusion has been shown to improve engraftment
(although there is still room for improvement). In this trial one unit will be injected
intraosseously and the other unit will be infused intravenously.
This study is being conducted as a forerunner to a larger, multi-center trial. The
investigators intend to enroll five patients over 1-2 years.
Hematopoietic (blood forming) stem cells (HSCs) reside primarily in the bone marrow.
Traditionally, HSCs have been obtained directly from the bone marrow. Transplants using
cells obtained this way are referred to as bone marrow transplants. HSCs also circulate in
the blood. Transplants using cells obtained from the blood of children and adults are
referred to as peripheral blood stem cell transplants. The blood of fetuses is especially
rich in HSCs and these cells can be easily collected at birth from the placenta. Transplants
using these cells are called cord blood transplants. Although HSCs can be collected from
various sites, all HSC transplants, regardless of the source, are given to recipients by
intravenous infusion. The transplanted HSCs then migrate to the bone marrow.
Over the past ten years unrelated cord blood transplantation has become an accepted
alternative to bone marrow transplantation. African-Americans and other minorities, who are
underrepresented in the National Marrow Donor Program, have benefited particularly from
this. In infants and young children cord blood transplantation appears to be as effective as
bone marrow transplantation. In older children, adolescents and adults, however, cord blood
transplantation has not been as effective, primarily because most cord blood units provide
an insufficient number of cells to ensure prompt and reliable engraftment ("taking" of the
transplanted cells in the recipient's bone marrow).
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Endpoint Classification: Safety/Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Single Group Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Treatment
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