RecruitingPhase 1Phase 2NCT04959175

Phase I/II Study to Reduce Post-transplantation Cyclophosphamide Dosing for Older or Unfit Patients Undergoing Bone Marrow Transplantation for Hematologic Malignancies


Sponsor

National Cancer Institute (NCI)

Enrollment

320 participants

Start Date

Sep 23, 2021

Study Type

INTERVENTIONAL

Conditions

Summary

Background: Certain blood cancers can be treated with blood or bone marrow transplants. Sometimes the donor cells attack the recipient's body, called graft-versus-host disease (GVHD). The chemotherapy drug cyclophosphamide helps reduce the risk and severity of GVHD. Researchers want to learn if using a lower dose of cyclophosphamide may reduce the drug's side effects while maintaining its effectiveness. Such an approach is being used in an ongoing clinical study at the NIH with promising results, but this approach has not been tested for transplants using lower doses of chemotherapy/radiation prior to the transplant. Objective: To learn if using a lower dose of cyclophosphamide will help people have a successful transplant and have fewer problems and side effects. Eligibility: Adults ages 18-85 who have a blood cancer that did not respond well to standard treatments or is at high risk for relapse without transplant, and their donors. Design: Participants may be screened with the following: Medical history Physical exam Blood and urine tests Heart and lung tests Body imaging scans (they may get a contrast agent) Spinal tap Bone marrow biopsy Participants will be hospitalized for 4-6 weeks. They will have a central venous catheter placed in a chest or neck vein. It will be used to give medicines, transfusions, and the donor cells, and to take blood. In the week before transplant, they will get 2 chemotherapy drugs and radiation. After the transplant, they will get the study drug for 2 days. They will take other drugs for up to 2 months. Participants must stay near NIH for 3 months after discharge for weekly study visits. Then they will have visits every 3-12 months until 5 years after transplant. Participants and donors will give blood, bone marrow, saliva, cheek swab, urine, and stool samples for research.


Eligibility

Min Age: 12 YearsMax Age: 85 Years

Plain Language Summary

Simplified for easier understanding

This Phase I/II study is testing whether a lower dose of a drug called post-transplantation cyclophosphamide (a medication that helps prevent rejection and dangerous immune reactions after a stem cell/bone marrow transplant) is just as safe and effective as the standard dose. This is specifically for older or medically frail patients with blood cancers who need a bone marrow transplant. **You may be eligible if...** - You have a blood cancer (such as leukemia, lymphoma, MDS, myeloma, or myelofibrosis) that requires a bone marrow transplant - You are either 60–85 years old, OR 18–60 years old but not suitable for standard high-intensity conditioning (due to prior transplant, organ dysfunction, frailty, or other reasons) - You have a suitable bone marrow donor (related or unrelated, fully or partially matched) - Your organ function is adequate (heart, lung, kidney, liver) - Your Karnofsky performance score is 60 or above **You may NOT be eligible if...** - Your blood cancer is not in remission or has not responded to prior treatment - You have another active, metastatic, or treatment-refractory cancer (other than non-melanoma skin cancer) - You are currently in another interventional clinical trial - You have an uncontrolled serious illness that makes transplant unsafe - You are breastfeeding Talk to your doctor to see if this trial is right for you.

This summary was AI-generated to explain the trial in plain language. It is not medical advice. Always discuss eligibility with your doctor before enrolling in a clinical trial.

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Interventions

DRUGMycophenolate Mofetil

15 mg/kg orally or IV three times daily (max 1000 mg/dose) starting on day +5, continued through day +35. May be continued beyond the protocol specified stop date if there is GVHD or mixed chimerism.

PROCEDUREAllogeneic HSCT

Stem cell transplant

DRUGFludarabine

30 mg/m2 IV infusion over 30-60 minutes once daily for 5 days (Pre-Transplant days -6 through -2).

DRUGSirolimus

Loading dose of 6 mg orally given on day +5 (calculated based on actual body weight, max initial dose 6 mg), then maintenance dose starting at 2 mg orally daily on day +6 with dose adjustments to maintain a trough of 5-12 ng/ml, continued through day +60 with no taper. May be continued beyond the protocol specified stop date if there is GVHD or mixed chimerism.

DRUGFilgrastim

begins on day +5 at a dose of 5 mcg/kg/day (actual body weight) IV or subcutaneously, until the absolute neutrophil count is \> 1,000/mm3 over the course of three days or \> 5,000/mm3 on one day. Rounding to the nearest vial is allowed. G-CSF may be stopped early or not administered if required by the clinical circumstance. Additional G-CSF may be administered as warranted.

DRUGCyclophosphamide

Pre-transplant: 14.5 mg/kg/day IV daily for 2 days pre-transplant (Pre-Transplant days -6 and -5). Post-transplant: 25 mg/kg/day or 35 mg/kg/day (Post-transplant days +3 and +4).

DRUGMesna

25 or 35 mg/kg (equal to the cyclophosphamide dose) as IV infusion concomitant with cyclophosphamide. Mesna may or may not be given with the pre-transplant cyclophosphamide depending on institutional practice.

PROCEDURETotal Body Irradiation (TBI)

400 centigray (cGy) to be delivered in 2 fractions as 200 cGy per fraction twice daily. Pre-Transplant Day -1 (or Day 0 prior to graft administration)


Locations(2)

National Institutes of Health Clinical Center

Bethesda, Maryland, United States

Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania

Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States

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NCT04959175


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