Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Terminated

TerminatedNCT01465100

Liver Cell Transplant for Phenylketonuria

Hepatocyte Transplantation for Phenylketonuria

Status
Terminated
Phase
Phase 1 / Phase 2
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
1 (actual)
Sponsor
Ira Fox · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
14 Years – 55 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

Human phenylketonuria (PKU) results from phenylalanine hydroxylase (PAH) deficiency, and represents one of the most common and extensively studied single-gene Mendelian disorders in humans. Unfortunately, optimum clinical outcome demands lifelong dietary restriction through adherence to an unpalatable and expensive artificial diet. Challenges in maintaining traditional therapy lead to increasing phenylalanine (Phe) levels in patients as they approach adulthood with an incumbent severe burden of psychosocial and intellectual difficulties. The recent introduction of the new medication Sapropterin for treatment of PKU has improved Phe control and dietary tolerance in some patients, but at enormous cost to patients and insurers for the FDA designated orphan product. Thus, there is an unmet need for novel therapies to correct PKU. PAH is almost exclusively expressed in the liver in humans. The main objective of the current proposal is to examine the safety and efficacy of hepatocyte transplantation in patients with PKU.

Detailed description

Hepatocytes from more than one donor may be required to provide sufficient numbers of cells for transplantation to correct the disease process. We have previously estimated that the hepatic mass of a recipient approaches 4 x 10 to the 9th power hepatocytes/kg. However, this is just an estimate and the true mass may be twice this number. Our goal is to attempt to infuse at least 2x10 to the 8th power cells/kg. Once it has been determined that IND release criteria for the hepatocytes has been met, the patient will then receive Intensity-Modulated Radiation Therapy (IMRT), and the hepatocyte transplant will begin. Preparative Liver Irradiation: A portion of the right hepatic lobe comprising between 35-50% of the entire liver volume will be irradiated to a dose of 10 Gy in a single fraction using a linear accelerator-based stereotactic radiosurgery system with intensity-modulated radiation therapy planning (IMRT). Respiratory gating will be used to further increase the accuracy of delivering the dose to a specified volume and limiting the exposure to adjacent tissues. After hepatic irradiation, the right or main portal vein will be occluded transiently (0-90 min) to provide a compensatory mitotic signal to donor hepatocytes. Transient portal vein occlusion or embolization has been shown in primates to provide the appropriate mitotic signals necessary for donor cell proliferation. At that time, donor hepatocytes will be transplanted into the irradiated portion of the recipient's liver. The number of infusions from each donor liver will depend on the tolerance of the patient to infusion (avoidance of portal vein thrombosis and portal vein to systemic venous system shunting), and viability of donor hepatocytes. The hepatocytes from each donor liver will be given over three to four infusions, every 6 to 8 hours, until the cells are no longer viable, approximately twenty-four hours after initial preparation. Ideally, the infusion catheter will be maintained just outside the portal circulation in the umbilical vein remnant so the patient can be potentially discharged from the hospital until the next donor liver is available. Since we do not yet know from our experience the number of cells needed for transplant in order to improve function so that a metabolic disease is cured, we will continue to infuse hepatocytes as donors become available until reaching the goal volume of hepatocytes and until viability of cells has expired. Using hepatocytes from multiple donors will help to ensure that an adequate number of cells is infused while maintaining portal pressure in the normal range.Phe levels will be collected once a week by the subject, using a capillary blood sample on a newborn screening filter paper, and mailed to CHP. Phe levels will also be collected in a venous sample monthly. During months when a Follow-Up Visit is scheduled, both a venous and capillary sample will be collected. Subjects will receive careful dietary observation post-transplant through the UPMC Children's Hospital of Pittsburgh Division of Medical Genetics research dietician. Three-day diet records will be completed once a month for six months, then every three months thereafter. Diet should remain unchanged throughout the study, unless directed by study staff. Subjects will undergo a repeat neuropsychological assessment at 6, 12 and 24 months post-transplant (Visits 4 and 6 and the End of Study Visit) which will be compared to results obtained pre-transplant to determine whether an improvement in assessment scoring is associated with the transplant procedure. Isotopic monitoring of whole body Phe oxidation will be performed at every follow-up visit following the final hepatocyte infusion. An additional Phe oxidation test may also be completed in the event of suspected graft rejection. Liver biopsies will be performed at 3 and 12 months post-transplant to assess for the presence of donor hepatocytes, and may be completed in the event of suspected graft rejection.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
RADIATIONPreparative Radiation TherapySubjects will undergo CT-based simulation and treatment planning for radiation therapy. Once a suitable hepatocyte donor is found and the cell count and viability is acceptable for transplantation, patients will receive Intensity-Modulated Radiation Therapy (IMRT) in one fraction(10 Gy)to the right lobe of the liver (but not exceeding 50% of the liver mass).
PROCEDUREHepatocyte TransplantTransplantation of hepatocytes into the liver will be through the portal vein, either accessed transhepatically, or by umbilical vein. After cell transplantation, measures will be taken to provide chronic access to the portal venous circulation system. If chronic access is achieved, patients will be seen in the PCTRC once a week to assess the site. Hepatocytes from more than one donor may be required to provide sufficient numbers of cells for transplantation to correct the disease process and to optimize Phe tolerance. Hepatocytes will be infused until the goal number of hepatocytes is infused. If viable hepatocytes remain after the goal number has been infused, the remaining cells will also be infused, as tolerated by the patient.
DRUGImmunosuppressionFollowing transplantation, patients will be treated with conventional immune suppression, as is used following whole organ liver transplantation. Patients will be followed as routinely performed following organ transplantation and also followed as would normally be performed for their PKU.
OTHERLiver EvaluationPrior to the hepatocyte transplant subjects will undergo a liver evaluation which is standard for all patients who have whole organ transplants at Children's Hospital of Pittsburgh of UPMC. The evaluation includes immunosuppression medication education, psychological assessment, bloodwork to assess blood count, blood and tissue type, blood chemistries, immune system function and certain infectious diseases, EKG, chest x-ray, and abdominal ultrasound to assess blood flow to the blood vessels in the liver. A liver biopsy may be performed if, in the clinical judgment of the investigators, the subject shows clinical signs of liver failure, or is at increased risk for liver fibrosis.
BEHAVIORALNeuro-psychological AssessmentSubjects will undergo a repeat neuropsychological assessment at 6, 12 and 24 months post-transplant (Visits 4 and 6 and the End of Study Visit) which will be compared to results obtained pre-transplant to determine whether an improvement in assessment scoring is associated with the transplant procedure.
DIAGNOSTIC_TESTWhole body Phe oxidation testingPatient will again be asked to not eat or drink for at least four hours prior to testing. Isotopic monitoring of whole body Phe oxidation will be performed pre-transplant and at every follow-up visit following the final hepatocyte infusion. An additional Phe oxidation test may also be completed in the event of suspected graft rejection.
PROCEDURELiver BiopsyLiver biopsies will be performed at 3 and 12 months post-transplant to assess for the presence of donor hepatocytes, and may be completed in the event of suspected graft rejection.

Timeline

Start date
2011-10-12
Primary completion
2015-08-21
Completion
2016-06-17
First posted
2011-11-04
Last updated
2023-08-16

Locations

1 site across 1 country: United States

Regulatory

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT01465100. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.