Thymus Transplantation With Immunosuppression



Status:Active, not recruiting
Conditions:Other Indications, Women's Studies
Therapuetic Areas:Other, Reproductive
Healthy:No
Age Range:Any
Updated:7/14/2018
Start Date:July 2002
End Date:June 2027

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Thymus Transplantation With Immunosuppression, #884

The research purpose is to determine if thymus transplantation with immunosuppression is a
safe and effective treatment for complete DiGeorge anomaly. The research includes studies to
evaluate whether thymus transplantation results in complete DiGeorge anomaly subjects
developing a normal immune system.

DiGeorge anomaly is a complex of cardiac defects, parathyroid deficiency, and thymus absence,
resulting in profound T-cell deficiency. There is a spectrum of disease in DiGeorge anomaly
with respect to all three defects. For complete DiGeorge anomaly subjects with severe T cell
defect, the PI had shown that thymus transplantation is safe and efficacious without
pretransplantation immunosuppression and with pretransplantation Thymoglobulin and
cyclosporine.

Some DiGeorge patients have very poor T cell function and are at risk of death from infection
or other immune problems; however, these patients have enough T cell function to reject
grafts. This protocol was designed for these patients. Atypical phenotype and some typical
phenotype DiGeorge subjects were included in this protocol.

Atypical complete DiGeorge anomaly patients have rash, lymphadenopathy, and oligoclonal T
cell proliferations. The T cells have no markers of thymic function (they do not co-express
CD45RA and CD62L; they do not contain T cell receptor rearrangement excision circles, TRECs).

Typical complete DiGeorge anomaly patients in this protocol are those whose PHA response >20
fold. Although these patients have very low T cell function, it may be enough to reject a
transplant, so Thymoglobulin was used.

Transplant Inclusion

- No age limit

- Thyroid studies must be done and if abnormal, must be on therapy

DiGeorge diagnosis - must have 1 symptom from the following list:

- Heart defect

- Hypocalcemia requiring replacement

- 22q11 hemizygosity

- 10p13 hemizygosity

- CHARGE association

- Abnormal ears plus mother with diabetes (type I, type II, or gestational)

Atypical Diagnosis:

- Must have, or have had, a rash. If rash present, biopsy of rash must show T cells in
skin. If rash & adenopathy resolved, must still have oligoclonal T cells.

- Within 1 month of tx must have PHA response >20 fold above background or >5,000 cpm,
whichever is higher, or response can be < this.

- Circulating CD3+ T cells >50/mm3 but CD45RA+CD62L+CD3+ T cells <50/mm or <5% of CD3
count, whichever is higher (must be done 2x)

- Immunoscope with >40% oligoclonal TCRBV families. A 2nd test per sponsor discretion if
T cell numbers increase or activation status changes.

- If TREC done pre-tx must have TRECs <100 per 100,000 CD3+ cells.

Typical Diagnosis:

- Circulating CD3+ CD45RA+ CD62L+ T cells and <50/mm3 or <5% of total T cells

- PHA response >20 fold above background or >5,000 cpm, whichever is higher.

- 2 studies must show similar immunological findings qualify for this study.

- TRECs, if done, should be <100/100,000 CD3 cells

Transplant Exclusion:

- Heart surgery <4 weeks pre-tx date

- Heart surgery anticipated w/in 3 months of proposed tx

- Rejection by surgeon or anesthesiologist as surgical candidates

- Lack of sufficient muscle tissue to accept 0.2 grams/kg transplant
We found this trial at
1
site
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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from
Durham, NC
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