Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Unknown

UnknownNCT00436761

Busulfan, Melphalan, and Antithymocyte Globulin Followed By Umbilical Cord Blood Transplant in Treating Young Patients With Refractory or Relapsed Malignant Solid Tumors

A Phase I Study to Examine the Toxicity of Killer IG-Like Receptor (KIR) Mismatched Umbilical Cord Blood for Pediatric Patients With Malignant Solid Tumors

Status
Unknown
Phase
Phase 1
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
20 (estimated)
Sponsor
Milton S. Hershey Medical Center · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
21 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

RATIONALE: Giving chemotherapy before a donor umbilical cord blood stem cell transplant helps stop the growth of tumor cells. It also helps stop the patient's immune system from rejecting the donor's stem cells when they do not exactly match the patient's blood. The donated stem cells may replace the patient's immune cells and help destroy any remaining tumor cells (graft-versus-tumor effect). Sometimes the transplanted cells from a donor can also make an immune response against the body's normal cells. Giving cyclosporine and methylprednisolone after the transplant may stop this from happening. PURPOSE: This phase I trial is studying the side effects of busulfan, melphalan, and antithymocyte globulin followed by umbilical cord blood transplant in treating young patients with refractory or relapsed malignant solid tumors.

Detailed description

OBJECTIVES: * Examine the impact of the use of killer cell immunoglobulin-like receptor (KIR)-mismatched umbilical cord blood as a source of hematopoietic stem cells, after busulfan, melphalan, and anti-thymocyte globulin in pediatric patients with relapsed or refractory solid tumors. * Determine the toxicity of this regimen, in terms of incidence of grade 3-4 acute graft-versus-host disease, donor/host chimerism, and cellular immunity against tumor cell lines, in these patients. OUTLINE: * Transplantation: Patients receive busulfan orally or IV every 6 hours on days -8 to -5, anti-thymocyte globulin IV over 6 hours on days -4 to -1, and melphalan IV over 15-20 minutes on days -4 to -2. Patients undergo allogeneic umbilical cord blood stem cell infusion on day 0. Patients receive sargramostim (GM-CSF) subcutaneously beginning on day 7 and continuing until blood counts recover. * Graft-vs-host disease prophylaxis: Patients receive cyclosporine IV over 1 hour or orally twice daily on days -1 to 180 and methylprednisolone IV or orally once or twice daily on days 5 - 49. Blood samples are collected periodically for immunophenotyping and flow cytometric analysis (including interferon gamma and other TH1 and TH2 cytokines). After completion of study treatment, patients are followed periodically. PROJECTED ACCRUAL: A total of 20 patients will be accrued for this study.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
BIOLOGICALanti-thymocyte globulin
BIOLOGICALgraft-versus-tumor induction therapy
BIOLOGICALsargramostim
DRUGbusulfan
DRUGcyclosporine
DRUGmelphalan
DRUGmethylprednisolone
OTHERflow cytometry
OTHERimmunologic technique
OTHERlaboratory biomarker analysis
PROCEDUREallogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation
PROCEDUREumbilical cord blood transplantation

Timeline

Start date
2004-05-01
First posted
2007-02-19
Last updated
2013-12-18

Locations

1 site across 1 country: United States

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT00436761. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.