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Trials / Terminated

TerminatedNCT01016795

Stem Cell Factor (SCF) Priming of Haematopoietic Stem Cell Grafts in Malignant Lymphoma

A Randomized Study of Peripheral Blood Progenitor Cell Priming Comparing a Combination of r-metHuSCF and Filgrastim or Chemotherapy and Filgrastim on Mobilization and Engraftment in Patients With Relapsed or Refractory Lymphomas

Status
Terminated
Phase
Phase 2
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
32 (actual)
Sponsor
Aalborg University Hospital · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years – 65 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

Clinical Hypothesis: It is expected that by removing chemotherapy and adding ancestim to the mobilization scheme in most of the subjects sufficient PBPC will be harvested with a minimum of toxicity and side effects.

Detailed description

Autologous stem cell transplantation is used to support high dose chemotherapy in haematological malignancies.1-2 Peripheral blood progenitor cells (PBPC) have replaced bone marrow cells as the preferred source for transplantation due to faster blood cell recovery.3-4 One variable of major impact for posttransplant care is the number of PBPC harvested.5-8 Therefore, several clinical studies have aimed to identify priming regimens that improve progenitor and stem cell mobilizations and collections without increased toxicity. Frequently, Filgrastim (r-met HuG-CSF) is administrated alone; however, Filgrastim combined with chemotherapy has proven more effective in context of CD34+ cell numbers harvested9-11 and this combination is considered the gold standard for priming and stem cell mobilization in relapsed malignant lymphoma. Stem cell factor (SCF) is a glycoprotein growth factor that acts on haematopoietic blood cell progenitors.12 Whereas SCF alone exerts little colony-stimulating activity on normal human bone marrow cells in vitro, combination of SCF with other recombinant haematopoietic cytokines results in a synergistic increase in numbers of colonies.13 In vivo, the addition of SCF to G-CSF (Filgrastim) synergistically increases PBPC mobilization compared to Filgrastim alone.14-17 Several clinical trials have reported the ability of the combination of SCF with Filgrastim to mobilize PBPC in patients with lymphoma, multiple myeloma, breast and ovarian cancers even in heavily pretreated patients.18-26 Priming using chemotherapy is toxic and costly11 and new priming procedures need to be established, which is the background for this randomized pilot study. The hypothesis is that elimination of chemotherapy from the priming regimen may decrease the overall toxicity and the ability to collect a sufficient autograft which, however, may be circumvented by adding r-metHuSCF (Ancestim) to the priming regimen. The aim of this randomized phase II trial was to evaluate safety, toxicity and efficacy of growth factors in lymphoma patients considered candidates for high dose chemotherapy.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DRUGr-metHuSCF and FilgrastimPatients were randomized in a 1:1 ratio to either chemotherapy combined with 10 µg/kg/d Filgrastim (control arm B), administered by subcutaneous injection for 14 days, or the combination of 10 µg/kg/d Filgrastim and SCF administered subcutaneously at a dose of 20 µg/kg/d (experimental arm A) for 8 days. Different injection sites were used for each cytokine.
DRUGr-metHuSCF and FilgrastimPatients were randomized in a 1:1 ratio to either chemotherapy combined with 10 µg/kg/d Filgrastim (control arm B), administered by subcutaneous injection for 14 days, or the combination of 10 µg/kg/d Filgrastim and SCF administered subcutaneously at a dose of 20 µg/kg/d (experimental arm A) for 8 days. Different injection sites were used for each cytokine.
DRUGChemotherapy plus FilgrastimPatients were randomized in a 1:1 ratio to either chemotherapy combined with 10 µg/kg/d Filgrastim (control arm B), administered by subcutaneous injection for 14 days, or the combination of 10 µg/kg/d Filgrastim and SCF administered subcutaneously at a dose of 20 µg/kg/d (experimental arm A) for 8 days. Different injection sites were used for each cytokine.

Timeline

Start date
1999-01-01
Primary completion
2000-11-01
Completion
2009-11-01
First posted
2009-11-20
Last updated
2015-06-25

Locations

8 sites across 4 countries: Denmark, Finland, Norway, Sweden

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT01016795. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.