Safety and Effectiveness of Cord Blood Stem Cell Infusion for the Treatment of Cerebral Palsy in Children



Status:Recruiting
Conditions:Neurology
Therapuetic Areas:Neurology
Healthy:No
Age Range:1 - 12
Updated:7/1/2018
Start Date:January 2010
End Date:July 2019
Contact:Kimberly R Gray, BBA, CCRP
Email:kigray@augusta.edu
Phone:706-721-1870

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A Placebo-Controlled, Observer-Blinded, Crossover Study to Evaluate the Safety and Effectiveness of a Single, Autologous, Cord Blood Stem Cell Infusion for the Treatment of Cerebral Palsy in Children

The purpose of this study is to test the safety and effectiveness of a cord blood infusion in
children who have motor disability due to cerebral palsy (CP). The subjects will be children
whose parents have saved their infant's cord blood, who have non-progressive motor
disability, and whose parents intend to have a cord blood infusion.

The purpose of this study is to conduct an observer-blinded crossover investigation of the
safety and efficacy of autologous cord blood infusion in children who demonstrate
non-progressive motor disability due to brain dysfunction (commonly called cerebral palsy)
and who do not have an apparent disorder of brain development or obstructive hydrocephalus.
The degree of delay in motor development will be such that the children are unable to sit
independently by 12 months of age or unable to walk independently by 18 months of age.
However, because the diagnosis is one of exclusion, we will enroll patients only after they
have reached two years of age. By this age, it is likely other conditions would be excluded.
As the Gross Motor Function Classification System (GMFCS) was developed for children up to 12
years of age, the maximum age of recruitment will be 12 years. Any level of cerebral palsy
severity will be allowed. The subjects will be children whose parents have saved their
infants cord blood, who have clinical evidence of a non-progressive motor disability, and
whose parents intend to have a cord blood infusion.

Inclusion Criteria:

- Must be more than 1 year of age and less than 12 years of age at the time of screening
for inclusion in the study.

- Clinical evidence of a non-progressive motor disability due to brain dysfunction. The
subjects will not have the ability to sit independently by one year of age or the
ability to walk by 18 months of age.

- Have stored umbilical cord blood with Cord Blood Registry (CBR) that meets all
selection and testing criteria.

- Willing to comply with all study procedures.

- The nucleated cells available in the cord blood sample stored at CBR must exceed 1 X
107 cells per kg body weight. (Note: Because cord blood collection has been in process
for about 16 years but widely for far less than that period, the age of most subjects
likely will be considerably less than 12 years of age. Due to the amount due of cord
blood available for most subjects, the body weight of subjects usually will not exceed
25 kg).

- The patients must be seizure-free or seizures adequately controlled. If there is a
suspicion of seizures and EEG should be done prior to inclusion.

Exclusion Criteria:

- Have complicating medical issues that would interfere with blood drawing, such as
venous access so limited that success is unlikely

- Presence of obstructive hydrocephalus.

- Presence of progressive neurological disease.

- Presence of significant defect of brain development, such as schizencephaly or
agenesis of corpus callosum

- Presence of known chromosomal anomaly

- Presence of major congenital anomaly

- Severe intrauterine growth restriction (birth weight less than 1800 grams)

- Cord blood viability <60%

- Positive infectious disease markers from mother's blood or cord blood at the time of
collection.

- Evidence of illness on planned infusion date (such as but not limited to fever >38.5,
vomiting, diarrhea, wheezing, or crackles)

- Pregnancy

- Use of immunosuppressive drugs

- Evidence of known genetic disorder

- Impaired hepatic or renal function
We found this trial at
1
site
Augusta, Georgia 30912
Principal Investigator: James E Carroll, M.D.
Phone: 706-721-3371
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mi
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Augusta, GA
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