Fetal Umbilical Cord Blood (UCB) Transplant for Lysosomal Storage Diseases



Status:Withdrawn
Conditions:Other Indications, Endocrine
Therapuetic Areas:Endocrinology, Other
Healthy:No
Age Range:18 - Any
Updated:4/5/2017
Start Date:October 2009
End Date:March 2017

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Treatment of Early Infantile-Onset Lysosomal Storage Diseases With Fetal Umbilical Cord Blood (UCB) Transplantation

The purpose of this study is to determine if it is safe to administer unrelated umbilical
cord blood to pregnant women in their first trimester of pregnancy with a fetus that has a
known diagnosis of certain lysosomal storage diseases. These diseases are known to cause
severe and irreversible neurological disability in early infancy and which are lethal in
childhood.

The purpose of this study is to determine the safety of first trimester fetal stem cell
therapy using unrelated donor partially HLA-matched stem and progenitor cells derived from
human umbilical cord blood for the treatment of selected lysosomal storage diseases that are
known to cause severe and irreversible neurological disability in early infancy and which
are lethal in childhood.

This study is designed as a prospective phase I open-label single center trial. It is
designed to asses the safety and feasibility of administration of ALD-601 UCB cells to first
trimester fetuses known to be affected with a lethal lysosomal storage disease. The sample
size is 12 patients enrolled in cohorts of size 3. Safety measures will be monitored by an
independent DSMC in each of the 4 cohorts prior to proceeding to the next cohort.

Biological parents being considered for therapy will have HLA testing, mutation analysis for
disease status, and psychological counseling. Mothers will have ultrasounds for gestational
age and chorion villus testing for mutation analysis for Krabbe, MLD, Tay Sachs, Sandhoff,
or PMD (whichever appropriate). A crown-rump length will be determined the day before the
scheduled transfer. The fetal weight will be calculated from formula: Y (kg) = (2.9026 x
10-1) (X 2.6528). The estimated fetal weight at that gestational age would be about 0.5
ounces or 14 grams. A suitably matched unrelated umbilical cord blood will be identified and
the 20% portion will be manipulated for the isolation of ALD-601 cells. ALD-601 (ALDHbr)
cells are isolated by high speed flow sorting on the FACSAria (BD Biosciences). Upon
completion of the sort, ALD-601 UCB cells are counted, viability is determined, and the
cellular composition of the sample is measured by analytical flow cytometry using
fluorescence antibodies to lineage marker for T-cells, granulocytes, monocytes, and
erythrocytes. The content of ALDHbr cells is also confirmed by analytical flow cytometry. A
dose of 1 x 105 - 2 x 106 cells/kg of estimated fetal weight is suspended in 300 microliters
of Cellgenix Stem Cell Medium (CellGenix, Inc.). Release criteria will allow a maximum of 5
x 104 T cells/kg. If the sorted sample contains greater than 5 x 104 T cells/kg it is
re-sorted using the FACSAria and re-evaluated for cell number, viability, and cellular
content. Sterility testing will include Bac-T/ALERT cultures, endotoxin measurement (LAL),
and gram stain. After meeting criteria for product release, ALD-601 is transported at 2-8
degree C in a validated cooler to Duke and released to the Stem Cell Laboratory. Duke
personnel will transport the cooler containing the ALD-601 product to the ultrasound suite,
where the medical team will allow the ALD-601 to warm briefly to room temperature prior to
injection. Under continuous ultrasound guidance, a 22-gauge X 5 inch procedure needle will
be used to puncture the fetal peritoneal cavity. 100 microliters of sterile saline will be
instilled to confirm intraperitoneal placement. The stem cell infusion will then be injected
through the needle followed by the injection of 200 microliters (dead space of the needle:
60 microliters) to displace all cells from the dead space of the needle. An ultrasound will
be performed 24 hours later to confirm fetal viability. A subsequent ultrasound will be
undertaken at 18 weeks gestation to confirm viability, assess detailed fetal anatomy and
adequate serial fetal growth.

Inclusion Criteria:

- Fetus with known enzymatic and, if possible, mutation diagnosis of selected lysosomal
storage diseases, and history of enzymatic or mutation diagnosis of a previously
affected family member.

- Krabbe disease

- Infantile metachromatic leukodystrophy disease (MLD)

- Tay Sachs or Sandhoff (GM2 gangliosidoses) disease

- Pelizaeus-Merzbacher disease (PMD).

- Both parents have the "at risk" genotype

- Both parents agree to psychological counseling prior to CVS

- Both parents agree to delivery of subject at Duke University

- Gestational age of < 9 weeks by sure menstrual dating or ultrasound of a natural
pregnancy.

- Singleton fetus

- No evidence of abnormal nuchal thickening on preliminary ultrasound prior to chorion
villus biopsy

Exclusion Criteria:

- Pregnancy by in vitro fertilization

- Evidence of a nuchal translucency of > 3.0 mm at the time of the ultrasound for the
chorion villus biopsy.

- HIV, hepatitis C or hepatitis B positive maternal status

- Active infection in the mother at the time of scheduled CVS or cell injection as
determined by clinical practice
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2301 Erwin Rd
Durham, North Carolina 27710
919-684-8111
Duke Univ Med Ctr As a world-class academic and health care system, Duke Medicine strives...
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