HIV Infection Clinical Trial
Official title:
Low Intensity Non-Myeloablative Preparative Conditioning Followed by Transplantation of Genetically Modified HLA-Matched Peripheral Blood Hematopoietic Precursor Cells (PBPC) for Hematologic Malignancies in HIV Positive Adults
This study will investigate the safety and effectiveness of a new stem cell transplant
procedure to treat acute or chronic leukemia, multiple myeloma, myelodysplastic syndrome,
Hodgkin's and non-Hodgkin's lymphoma in HIV-infected patients.
HIV-infected patients usually are not offered bone marrow transplant treatments because they
are at increased risk of dying from the intense chemotherapy and radiation therapy used for
the procedure. This study uses a modified procedure, transplanting stem cells instead of
bone marrow, designed to be less dangerous for such patients. Patients will also undergo a
procedure called gene transfer to try to halt progression of their HIV infection. The
procedure in this study differs from standard bone marrow transplantation in three ways:
Stem cells will be transplanted instead of bone marrow. (Stem cells, which are produced by
the bone marrow, mature into the different blood components-white and red cells and
platelets.) The stem cell donor will be given a drug that releases these cells from their
bone marrow into the blood stream. The cells will then be collected from the donor by
apheresis, a procedure in which whole blood is drawn, the stem cells separated and removed,
and the rest of the blood returned to the donor.);
The procedure will use lower doses of chemotherapy than the conventional method, and will
not use radiation therapy; or
A laboratory-manufactured gene designed to obstruct HIV reproduction will be inserted into
the stem cells, rendering future cells that develop from resistance to the virus.
Prospective patients will be tested for matching with an HIV-negative donor (family member)
and will undergo a medical history, physical examination and several tests (e.g., breathing
tests, X-rays, etc.) to determine eligibility for the study. Study participants will then
undergo apheresis to collect white blood cells called lymphocytes. Stem cells will be
collected from the donor. Half the donated cells will have the HIV-resistant gene inserted;
the other half will have a "control" gene inserted. Additional stem cells collected a second
day will not be manipulated. All the donor cells will be frozen until transplantation.
Patients will be given drugs (cyclophosphamide, fludarabine and cyclosporin) to prevent the
donated cells from being rejected and to prevent them from damaging the patient's organs.
The thawed stem cells will then be infused through a vein. After 30, 60 and 100 days, bone
marrow cells and circulating lymphocytes will be checked to see how many are of donor cell
origin. If less than 100 percent are of donor origin, more lymphocytes will be transfused.
Patients will have physical examinations and blood tests once or twice a week for 2 to 3
months with and then will be followed periodically for at least 5 years.
Adult patients with myelodysplasia, leukemia, and non-Hodgkin's lymphoma can be cured by
allogeneic bone marrow transplantation (BMT). This curative effect has until now been
ascribed to the intense chemoradiotherapy used to condition the recipient for
transplantation. The assumption that the curative effect of allogeneic transplantation rests
in the ability to deliver very high doses of chemoradiotherapy has led to the restriction of
allogeneic transplantation to those recipient patients whose overall status would permit the
use of such intense conditioning. As a result, HIV positivity has generally appeared as an
exclusion criteria to allogeneic transplantation for hematologic malignancies. Additionally,
early studies of allogeneic BMT in HIV patients suggested no benefit in controlling the
progression to AIDS.
Several in vitro studies have demonstrated the existence of donor derived CD4 and CD8
positive lymphocytes with specific reactivity to recipient leukemia providing a potent graft
versus leukemia (GVL) effect, and this GVL effect is area of intense interest both at the
NIH and elsewhere. In fact, early attempts to decrease treatment related mortality in
chronic myelogenous leukemia (CML) patients undergoing allogeneic BMT by T-cell depletion of
the graft resulted in an unacceptably high rate of relapse suggesting that alloreactivity in
the donor graft accounted for a significant portion of the cure rate in this disease. This
GVL effect is most dramatically demonstrated among relapsed allogeneic bone marrow
transplant recipients transplanted for CML in whom a simple infusion of donor lymphocytes
can induce a complete and durable remission.
Non-myeloablative allogeneic peripheral blood stem cell transplants are currently being
investigated for engraftment efficacy and toxicity in a number of transplant centers.
Preliminary data including our own experience with 13 patients undergoing this type of
procedure have shown a high rate of complete donor engraftment, low toxicity, and
preservation of the GVL effect. Two recent published studies investigating non-myeloablative
allo-transplantation in standard risk patients revealed an extremely low rate of transplant
related complications and mortality.
The decreased risk of transplant related complications associated with non-myeloablative
transplants expands the eligibility of transplant candidates and may allow successful
application in patients infected with HIV. In this study, we will assess the safety and
efficacy of nonmyeloablative transplantation in patients with HIV infection. Moreover, the
introduction of an HIV resistance vector into a portion of the allogeneic graft provides a
unique opportunity to test the in vivo efficacy of introducing resistance to HIV through the
self renewing stem cell.
The end points of this study are engraftment, degree of donor-host chimerism, incidence of
acute and chronic GVHD, transplant related morbidity and mortality, disease free survival,
as well as overall survival, and overall level and persistence of progeny of gene modified
cells.
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Endpoint Classification: Safety Study, Primary Purpose: Treatment
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