Severe Combined Immunodeficiency Clinical Trial
Official title:
Phase I/II Trial of De-Escalation of Busulfan With Fludarabine and Antithymocyte Globulin as Preparative Therapy for Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplant for the Treatment of Severe Congenital T-Cell Immunodeficiency
This is a multi-institution, single arm, non-randomized pilot study coordinated by the
Pediatric Blood and Marrow Transplant Consortium. Eligible patients will have severe
combined immunodeficiency syndrome (SCID) or severe T-cell immunodeficiency disorder.
Patients with these disorders do not have properly functioning immune systems. Without
treatment, these disorders result in early childhood death. The standard treatment used for
these diseases is to give the patient a stem cell transplant from a matched donor. The donor
cells can be from a family member, an unrelated marrow donor or umbilical cord blood. The
donor source will impact on transplant risks and approaches to the preparative regimen.
There have been many different preparative regimens used for patients with SCIDS or severe
T-cell immunodeficiency syndromes. Some patients have gotten no preparative regimen, while
others have gotten only antithymocyte globulin (ATG; immune proteins made in horses that,
when given, will kill lymphocytes). Still other patients have gotten conventional
chemotherapy. In children treated with nothing or ATG alone, there is an increased risk of
graft failure or only partial engraftment. When this happens, patients need life-long
therapy with immunoglobulins to support the immune system. Children treated with
chemotherapy generally have full immune recovery, but also may have major side effects from
the chemotherapy. The side effects include infection, organ failure and infertility.
This protocol, in combination with a parallel study with a separate preparative regimen,
will attempt to answer the question of which patients with primary immunodeficiencies need a
preparative regimen and what intensity is needed. Patients will be enrolled according to
disease type and donor source. The purpose of this study is to see how much chemotherapy is
actually needed for the transplant to work. To be able to do this and still make the
transplant work, the drugs used to temporarily weaken the immune system will be
strengthened. In groups, patients will be treated with lowering doses of the busulfan to
find the lowest dose of this drug that is needed to get full immune recovery. The
investigators hope this regimen will result in complete immune system recovery while
limiting the side effects of chemotherapy. A second purpose of this study is to track the
recovery of different parts of the immune system. The investigators also want to identify
whether the recovery is coming from donor stem cells or from the patient.
The patient will be admitted to the hospital to have the transplant and is expected to stay
for up to 4 to 6 weeks. The preparative regimen will be made up of busulfan, fludarabine and
antithymocyte globulin (ATG). After the preparative regimen, the cells from the donor will
be given. To try and keep the patient's body from rejecting the donor cells and the donor
cells from attacking the patient's body (graft-versus-host disease, or GVHD), cyclosporine
will be given.
The investigators will draw an extra 2 - 4 teaspoons of blood at specified time points to
test for immune recovery and donor cell chimerism (the portion of the blood that belongs to
the donor). Standard bone marrow transplant (BMT) clinical care will be provided with
respect to pretransplant evaluation, peritransplant support, and posttransplant follow-up.
n/a
Allocation: Non-Randomized, Intervention Model: Single Group Assignment, Masking: Open Label
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