Multivirus-specific T Cells for the Treatment of Virus Infections After Stem Cell Transplant
NCT02108522 · Status: COMPLETED · Phase: NA · Type: INTERVENTIONAL · Enrollment: 82
Last updated 2021-07-20
Summary
Patients enrolled on this study will have received a stem cell transplant. After a transplant, while the immune system grows back the patient is at risk for infection. Some viruses can stay in the body for life and if the immune system is weakened, like after a transplant, they can cause life threatening infections.
Patients enrolled on this study will have had an infection with one or more of the following viruses - Epstein Barr virus (EBV), cytomegalovirus (CMV), BK virus, JC virus, adenovirus or HHV6 (Human Herpes Virus 6).
Investigators want to see if they can use a kind of white blood cell called T cells to treat infections of these viruses after a transplant. Investigators have observed in other studies that treatment with specially trained T cells has been successful when the cells are made from the transplant donor. However as it takes 1-2 months to make the cells, that approach is not practical when a patient already has an infection.
Investigators have now generated multivirus-specific T cells (VSTs) from the blood of healthy donors and created a bank of these cells. Investigators have previously successfully used frozen multivirus-specific T cells from healthy donors to treat virus infections after bone marrow transplant and now have improved the production method to make it safer and target more viruses.
In this study, investigators want to find out if they can use these banked VSTs to fight infections caused by the viruses mentioned above.
Conditions
Interventions
- BIOLOGICAL
-
Multivirus Specific T cells
Sponsors & Collaborators
-
Center for Cell and Gene Therapy, Baylor College of Medicine
collaborator OTHER -
Baylor College of Medicine
collaborator OTHER -
The Methodist Hospital Research Institute
collaborator OTHER -
AlloVir
lead INDUSTRY
Principal Investigators
-
Bilal Omer, MD · Baylor College of Medicine
Study Design
- Allocation
- NA
- Purpose
- TREATMENT
- Masking
- NONE
- Model
- SINGLE_GROUP
Eligibility
- Sex
- ALL
- Healthy Volunteers
- No
Timeline & Regulatory
- Start
- 2014-06-30
- Primary Completion
- 2018-12-31
- Completion
- 2019-12-31
Countries
- United States
Study Locations
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