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T-Cell Depleted, Alternative Donor Transplant in Pediatric and Adult Patients With Severe Sickle Cell Disease (SCD) and Other Transfusion-Dependent Anemias
The purpose of this study is to evaluate what effect, if any, mismatched unrelated volunteer donor and/or haploidentical related donor stem cell transplant may have on severe sickle cell disease and other transfusion dependent anemias. By using mismatched unrelated volunteer donor and/or haploidentical related donor stem cells, this study will increase the number of patients who can undergo a stem cell transplant for their specified disease. Additionally, using a T-cell depleted approach should reduce the incidence of graft-versus-host disease which would otherwise be increased in a mismatched transplant setting.
CD3/CD19 depletion of mismatched donor grafts in the setting of reduced intensity, immune-ablative conditioning for patients with sickle cell disease and other transfusion-dependent anemias should sufficiently achieve engraftment while decreasing the incidence of treatment-related toxicities and achieving an acceptable incidence of graft versus host disease. Utilizing mismatched unrelated volunteer donors and haploidentical related donors will increase the number of patients able to undergo hematopoietic stem cell transplant (HSCT) for these diseases. Additionally, the institutional availability of virus-specific, donor-derived cytotoxic T lymphocytes should address complicated viral infections refractory to standard anti-viral therapy. The purpose is to: * To provide alternate donor transplantation from cryopreserved stem cell grafts that are fully characterized for safety and potency to patients with severe sickle cell disease, beta-thalassemia major, or Diamond-Blackfan anemia who do not have matched sibling donor, matched unrelated donor or cord blood donor options. * To utilize a reduced-intensity conditioning regimen to achieve minimal treatment-related morbidity and mortality while attaining sustained donor engraftment and donor chimerism \>20% in order to rescue disease phenotype, specifically in SCD patients. * To utilize ex-vivo T-cell depletion methods to prevent graft-versus-host disease in the setting of mismatched donor transplantation. * To utilize additional donor cell products to ensure sufficient immune reconstitution in the immediate post-transplant period, to improve mixed chimerism or provide non-specific anti-viral activity in patients with virus reactivation in the post-transplant period. * To utilize calcineurin inhibitor-free regimen in an effort to minimize/prevent central nervous system toxicity
Age
5 - 40 years
Sex
ALL
Healthy Volunteers
No
Children's Hospital of Pittsburgh of UPMC
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, United States
Start Date
August 2, 2018
Primary Completion Date
August 1, 2026
Completion Date
August 1, 2027
Last Updated
August 12, 2025
5
ESTIMATED participants
CD3/CD19 depleted leukocytes
BIOLOGICAL
CD45RA depleted leukocytes
BIOLOGICAL
Hydroxyurea
DRUG
Rituximab
DRUG
Alemtuzumab
DRUG
Fludarabine
DRUG
Thiotepa
DRUG
Lead Sponsor
Paul Szabolcs
NCT03050268
NCT06647979
Data Source & Attribution
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