Islamabad, Dec 16 : A new method to boost the
number of immune cells in umbilical cord blood prior to cord blood transplants
for cancer patients appears to lead to a quicker rebuilding of a new immune
system in the patient's body than with a conventional cord blood transplant
procedure, according to new research from the Perelman School of Medicine at the
University of Pennsylvania that is being presented at the 53rd American Society
of Hematology Annual Meeting.
The technique also paves the way for the
development of a way to provide these transplant patients with a salvage therapy
from the same donor if their cancer returns.
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"Umbilical cord
blood is a potential cancer therapy that is thrown away every day," said lead
author Elizabeth Hexner, MD, an assistant professor in the division of
Hematology-Oncology in Penn's Abramson Cancer Center. "Our findings point to a
promising method to make better use of scarce cord blood resources available
through public banks, which offer the only transplant option for patients who
have no suitably matched blood or bone marrow donor prospects."
Though
cord blood has a larger number of stem cells by volume than blood or marrow from
living donors, the actual amount of blood available per cord is smaller --
containing about one tenth the number of cells collected from living donors.
That deficit typically leads to a slower rebuilding of a sick patient's new
immune system following transplant, leaving patients vulnerable to severe, even
life-threatening infections. On the other hand, because immune cells in cord
blood are less developed and have not been fully "educated" to attack perceived
invaders in the body, patients who undergo cord blood transplants are less
likely to suffer graft-versus-host disease (GVHD) -- a common, dangerous
complication in which the new cells assault healthy organs like the liver and
skin -- doctors say that improvements to the transplant procedure hold great
potential.
The procedure used in the Penn trial, involving four patients,
began with cord blood donations that had been separated into two parts --
typically an 80 percent fraction and a 20 percent fraction -- prior to freezing.
Then, the team thawed the smaller fraction two weeks prior to
transplant, activated and grew the number of donated T cells -- which are a key
driver for the process that recovers transplant patients' immune system and play
a role in fighting infections -- using the co-stimulatory compounds CD3 and CD28
in Penn's Clinical Cell and Vaccine Production Facility. Following a
chemotherapy and radiation regimen to destroy patients' remaining cancer cells
and the administration of immunosuppression drugs to prevent rejection of the
donor cells, patients then received the thawed, larger fraction of the cord
blood first (a standard, single cord blood transplant). An infusion of the newly
activated and expanded T cells followed, with a portion of those cells being
reserved and frozen for potential future use as immunotherapy in the event of a
cancer relapse or transplant failure.
"Donor lymphocyte infusions (DLI)
are frequently given to patients who need them following stem cell transplants
from living donors, but until now, we have been unable to offer this therapy to
cord blood transplant patients because the source of their cells is used up at
the time of transplant," Hexner says. "Our results show that we are able to grow
sufficient numbers of T cells to be available both for that use as well as to
buoy the number of cells that patients receive during the transplant itself,
which seems to have helped their immune systems come back online more quickly
than is typically seen in umbilical cord blood transplants."
Three of the
patients enrolled on the study experienced relatively early neutrophil
engraftment -- the point at which these critical infection fighting cells in our
body reach 500 per microliter. This milestone is important because above this
threshold, the risk of life-threatening infections is drastically lower. For
these three patients, engraftment was achieved on days 12, 20, and 17
post-transplant. This was approximately half the time this process has
historically taken with this type of transplant, substantially narrowing the
window in which patients have the greatest risk of death from transplant
complications.
Research has shown that using two cords per transplant
can also speed this process, but that tactic also doubles the cost of the
procedure, to more than $60,000. The fourth trial patient's umbilical cord blood
graft failed, and they were subsequently treated with another stem cell
transplant. There were no infusion-related adverse events observed during the
trial, and three of the four expansion samples yielded enough cells for future
immunotherapeutic DLI use. Next, the team hopes to test the optimal expanded T
cell dose necessary for speeding the process of immune recovery and develop a
method to perform DLI after transplant.
Though the new research paves the
way for improvements in the use of existing cord blood resources to improve
transplant outcomes, the Penn team says their work also sheds light on the need
to buoy the number of public cord blood banks through which new parents can opt
to donate their newborns' cord blood for use treating sick patients. Commercial,
private cord blood banks have proliferated in the United States in recent years,
despite a lack of evidence proving the utility of this so-called "biological
insurance" and statements from the American Academy of Pediatrics and other
groups discouraging new parents from paying for the service.
Since cord
blood stored in public banks is already frozen and awaiting use, it offers a
less labor intensive, quicker way to match patients for transplant than the two
to three month timeframe for locating and obtaining cells from a matching
unrelated donor through the National Marrow Donor Program. Blood stored in
private banks, however, is not available for treatment of unrelated donors for
whom a living blood or marrow donor cannot be located.
"In many parts of
the country, even families who want to donate their infant's cord blood for care
of unrelated sick patients are not able to do so because no public bank exists
in their area," Hexner says. "Greater investment in public banks and more
opportunities for parents to donate to these banks are a necessary component of
improving care for patients with blood
cancers."
Ends
SA/EN
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» Novel way to improve outcomes from umbilical cord blood transplants
Novel way to improve outcomes from umbilical cord blood transplants
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