Tundra Space

Tundra Space

Clinical Research Directory

Browse clinical research sites, groups, and studies.

Back to Studies
COMPLETED
NCT01129544
PHASE1/PHASE2

Gene Transfer for Severe Combined Immunodeficiency, X-linked (SCID-X1) Using a Self-inactivating (SIN) Gammaretroviral Vector

Sponsor: David Williams

View on ClinicalTrials.gov

Summary

Researchers are working on ways to treat SCID patients who don't have a matched brother or sister. One of the goals is to avoid the problems that happen with stem cell transplant from parents and unrelated people, such as repeat transplants, incomplete cure of the immune system, exposure to chemotherapy, and graft versus host disease. The idea behind gene transfer is to replace the broken gene by putting a piece of genetic material (DNA) that has the normal gene into the child's cells. Gene transfer can only be done if we know which gene is missing or broken in the patient. For SCID-X1, gene transfer has been done in the laboratory and in two previous clinical trials by inserting the normal gene into stem cells from bone marrow. The bone marrow is the "factory" inside the bones that creates blood and immune cells. So fixing the gene in the bone marrow stem cells should fix the immune problem, without giving chemotherapy and without risk of graft versus host disease, because the child's own cells are used, rather than another person's. Out of the 20 subjects enrolled in the two previous trials, 18 are alive with better immune systems after gene transfer. Two of the surviving subjects received gene corrected cells over 10 years ago. Gene transfer is still research for two reasons. One is that not enough children have been studied to tell if the procedure is consistently successful. Of the 20 children enrolled in the previous two trials, one child did not have correction of the immune system, and died of complications after undergoing stem cell transplant. The second important reason why gene transfer is research is that we are still learning about the side effects of gene transfer and how to do gene transfer safely. In the last two trials, 5 children have experienced a serious side effect. These children developed leukemia related to the gene transfer itself. Leukemia is a cancer of the white blood cells, a condition where a few white blood cells grow out of control. Of these children, 4 of the 5 have received chemotherapy (medication to treat cancer) and are currently in remission (no leukemia can be found by sensitive testing), whereas one died of gene transfer-related leukemia.

Official title: Multi-site Phase I/II Trial Evaluating the Treatment of SCID-X1 Patients With Retrovirus-mediated Gene Transfer

Key Details

Gender

MALE

Age Range

Any - Any

Study Type

INTERVENTIONAL

Enrollment

8

Start Date

2010-04

Completion Date

2023-03

Last Updated

2026-04-21

Healthy Volunteers

No

Interventions

BIOLOGICAL

Gene transfer

Three procedures: 1) Bone marrow harvest from the patient's posterior iliac crests. 2.) Chemotherapy conditioning with Busulfan 3)One time infusion of patient's transduced bone marrow cells.

Locations (3)

Mattel Children's Hospital - UCLA

Los Angeles, California, United States

Children's Hospital Boston

Boston, Massachusetts, United States

Cincinnati Children's Medical Center

Cincinnati, Ohio, United States