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Clinical Trial Summary

The main purpose of this study is to test the safety and determine the type and severity of any side effects of the Dendritic Cell Fusion Vaccine given in combination with an autologous transplant for patients with multiple myeloma. Autologous stem cell transplantation is a standard therapy for multiple myeloma that is often successful in significantly decreasing the amount of cancer. However, it is not a cure because at some point the multiple myeloma generally begins to grow again. Cancer vaccines are investigational agents that try to stimulate the immune system to recognize and fight against cancer cells. One type of cancer vaccine uses an immune stimulating cell of the body known as a dendritic cell. Research has shown that these dendritic cells can stimulate an immune response against the tumor.


Clinical Trial Description

- The first group of participants on this study will receive up to 3 monthly doses of the study vaccine beginning about 1 month following the autologous transplant. If this is found to be safe, the next group will receive one additional study vaccine prior to the transplant and then up to 3 doses after the transplant. - If the screening tests determine that the participant is eligible for the study, they will undergo dendritic cell collection by a procedure called leukapheresis. Leukapheresis involves the collection of white blood cells from the blood. Dendritic cells are grown from these white blood cells in the laboratory. Tumor cells will also be collected from the bone marrow through a bone marrow aspirate/biopsy. - After cells have been collected for study vaccine generation, the participant may receive standard therapy to reduce the number of multiple myeloma cells in the body. The specific regimen will be determined by the participants multiple myeloma physician. - The first group of patients will receive the study vaccine only after the transplant. If this is found safe then the second group will receive a single study vaccine prior to the transplant. - Prior to the autologous stem cell transplant, we will harvest stem cells from the participants blood that will be used for the transplant later. G-CSF will be given as a daily injection beginning the day after the chemotherapy and GM-CSF injections will be started seven days after the chemotherapy. These injections will continue until after the stem cells are collected. Approximately 10 days after the chemotherapy, participants will undergo a leukapheresis procedure to collect the stem cells. - Within a few weeks of successful stem cell collection, the participant will be admitted to the hospital for high dose chemotherapy with autologous stem cell transplantation. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT00458653
Study type Interventional
Source Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center
Contact
Status Completed
Phase Phase 1
Start date April 2005
Completion date July 2020

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