scholarly journals Successful Engraftment of Umbilical Cord Blood (UCB) Cells after Co-Transplantation of Nicord® (Ex Vivo Expanded UCB Progenitor Cells with Nicotinamide) and an Unmanipulated UCB Unit after Myeloablative Chemotherapy in Severe Sickle Cell Disease

2017 ◽  
Vol 23 (3) ◽  
pp. S175-S176 ◽  
Author(s):  
Suhag Parikh ◽  
Joel Brochstein ◽  
Paul L. Martin ◽  
Mitchell E. Horwitz ◽  
Einat Galamidi ◽  
...  
2011 ◽  
Vol 17 (9) ◽  
pp. 1375-1382 ◽  
Author(s):  
Annalisa Ruggeri ◽  
Mary Eapen ◽  
Andromachi Scaravadou ◽  
Mitchell S. Cairo ◽  
Monica Bhatia ◽  
...  

Blood ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 128 (22) ◽  
pp. 3651-3651 ◽  
Author(s):  
Suhag H Parikh ◽  
Joel Brochstein ◽  
Paul L. Martin ◽  
Mitchell E. Horwitz ◽  
Einat Galamidi ◽  
...  

Abstract Background: Patients with severe sickle cell disease (SCD) experience organ damage, poor quality of life, and are at high risk of premature mortality. To date, allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplant remains the only available curative therapy for SCD. However, patients with SCD have difficulties finding matched related or unrelated donors for transplantation. UCB could be an alternative graft option for most of the SCD patients but, to date, results with unrelated UCB have not been satisfactory for these hard to engraft patients. NiCord is an ex vivo expanded product manufactured from an entire UCB unit which has been shown to produce rapid and sustained engraftment in combination with a second unmanipulated CB unit or as a standalone graft in adult patients with high-risk hematologic malignancies. We hypothesized that the combination of NiCord with an unmanipulated UCB unit might overcome the engraftment barriers which have limited the success of UCBT in patients with SCD. This strategy is currently evaluated for safety and efficacy in a phase I/II multi-center study in pediatric patients with SCD undergoing myeloablative conditioning therapy. Here we report the results of the first 8 patients in the study. Methods: Patients with SCD and high risk features were eligible if they were between 2 and 45 years of age and if they had adequate performance status and organ function, 2 suitable unrelated UCB units that minimally matched the patient at 4/6 HLA alleles, and if they did not have a fully HLA matched related or unrelated adult donor. The NiCord graft, manufactured by the study sponsor, consisted of a CD133+ expanded cell fraction and an uncultured CD133- T-cell containing fraction. All patients received hydroxyurea beginning on day -35. Patients were subsequently prepared for transplantation with myeloablative chemotherapy: Busulfan/Cyclophosphamide and Anti Thymocyte Globulin (ATG). After the first 3 patients an adverse effect of ATG on the expanded graft was suspected and ATG was replaced by Fludarabine for the subsequent 5 patients. On day 0, the unmanipulated CB unit and NiCord graft were infused. Engraftment, GVHD incidence, treatment related mortality and survival were assessed by conventional parameters. Results: Eight patients, at a median age of 12 years (range 3-16 years) and a median weight of 41 kg (range 17-67 kg) were transplanted. HLA matching between patients and NiCord units was 4/6 (n=7) and 5/6 (n=1); and that between patients and unmanipulated units was 4/6 (n=5) and 5/6 (n=3). Median CD34+ cell dose infused in the NiCord graft was 107 x 105/kg. All 8 transplanted patients initially engrafted neutrophils at a median of 7 days (range 6-20 days) with the NiCord graft. One patient experienced secondary graft failure and died after a second transplant. Ultimately, long term engraftment was derived from NiCord in 2 patients, from the unmanipulated unit in 4 patients and mixed donor chimerism is still sustained in one patient. Patients were hospitalized for initial transplant for a median of 55 days (range 43-100 days). The 7 patients with sustained full donor cell engraftment are currently alive at a median follow-up of 33 months (range 3-45 months), transfusion free and without sickle cell related symptoms. Engraftment and clinical outcomes of the 8 patients are shown in Table 1. Conclusions: NiCord appears to overcome the engraftment barriers of UCB in patients with SCD. Remarkably, sustained donor cell engraftment was obtained in 7/8 patients, despite 4/6 matched UCB units and 5 patients without ATG. NiCord has the potential to increase access to transplantation for patients with SCD by enabling the successful use of unrelated UCB donors. Further optimization of this approach with strategies to further decrease GVHD is warranted. Table 1. Table 1. Disclosures Martin: Novartis: Other: Support of clinical trials; Jazz Pharmaceuticals: Other: One time discussion panel. Galamidi:Gamida Cell Ltd.: Employment. Peleg:Gamida Cell Ltd.: Employment. Goshen:Gamida Cell Ltd.: Employment. Schwarzbach:Gamida Cell Ltd.: Employment. Snyder:Gamida Cell Ltd.: Employment. Peled:Gamida Cell Ltd.: Employment.


Blood ◽  
2007 ◽  
Vol 110 (11) ◽  
pp. 4039-4039
Author(s):  
Ri Zhang ◽  
Wenjin Gao ◽  
Yuanyuan Sun ◽  
Jingcheng Miao ◽  
Xueguang Zhang

Abstract Transforming growth factor-beta 1 (TGF-β1) is known to maintain primitive human hematopoietic stem/progenitor cells with polyfunctional role in a quiescent state and CD133 is a new stem cell antigen that may provide an alternative to CD34 for the selection and expansion of hematopoietic cells for transplantation. To investigate the specific effect of TGF-β1 on proliferation and differentiation of CD133 positive cells derived from umbilical cord blood (UCB) during short-term culture in vitro, CD133 positive cells from 20 fresh UCB samples were selected using Miltenyi Biotec’s CliniMACS separation device and were cultured in IMDM medium with 20% FCS in the presence of a cytokine combination of SCF, IL-6, thrombopoietin, IL-3 and Flt3-ligand for up to 2 weeks and TGF-β1 with low concentration was also added to the mediumon day 4. The proliferative response was assessed at day 7, day 10 and day 14 by evaluating the following parameters: nucleated cells (NC), clonogenic progenitors (CFU-GEMM,CFU-GM and BFU-E), and immunophenotypes (CD133 and CD34). The results showed that efficacious expansion of various hematopoietic stem/progenitor cells was constantly observed during the culture. The fold expansion of NC on day7, day10 and day14 expansion were 33.59,224.26 and 613.48, respectively. The fold expansion of CFU-GEMM, CFU-GM and BFU-E on day 10 were 24.89, 41.62 and 49.28, respectively, obviously higher than that without ex vivo expansion (P<0.05). The expansions of CD133+, CD133+CD34+ and CD34+ subpopulation on day 14 were up to 25.83-fold, 16.16-fold and 60.54-fold, respectively. Furthermore the expansion systems with TGF-β1 showed more CD133+ cells than control at every time points. Our datas suggested that the CD133+ cells from human UCB have great expansion potential for ex-vivo expansion. The low concentration of TGF-β1 may delay over-differentiation of hematopoietic stem/progenitor cells.


2021 ◽  
Vol 5 (17) ◽  
pp. 3362-3372
Author(s):  
Yinghui Li ◽  
Wenshan Zhang ◽  
Yu Zhang ◽  
Yahui Ding ◽  
Ming Yang ◽  
...  

Abstract The use of umbilical cord blood transplant has been substantially limited by the finite number of hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells in a single umbilical cord blood unit. Small molecules that not only quantitatively but also qualitatively stimulate enhancement of hematopoietic stem cell (HSC) self-renewal ex vivo should facilitate the clinical use of HSC transplantation and gene therapy. Recent evidence has suggested that the cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor, p18INK4C (p18), is a critical regulator of mice HSC self-renewal. The role of p18 in human HSCs and the effect of p18 inhibitor on human HSC expansion ex vivo need further studies. Here we report that knockdown of p18 allowed for an increase in long-term colony-forming cells in vitro. We then identified an optimized small molecule inhibitor of p18, 005A, to induce ex vivo expansion of HSCs that was capable of reconstituting human hematopoiesis for at least 4 months in immunocompromised mice, and hence, similarly reconstituted secondary recipients for at least 4 more months, indicating that cells exposed to 005A were still competent in secondary recipients. Mechanistic studies showed that 005A might delay cell division and activate both the Notch signaling pathway and expression of transcription factor HoxB4, leading to enhancement of the self-renewal of long-term engrafting HSCs and the pool of progenitor cells. Taken together, these observations support a role for p18 in human HSC maintenance and that the p18 inhibitor 005A can enhance the self-renewal of long-term HSCs.


2021 ◽  
Vol 5 (3) ◽  
pp. 843-852
Author(s):  
Suhag Parikh ◽  
Joel A. Brochstein ◽  
Einat Galamidi ◽  
Aurélie Schwarzbach ◽  
Joanne Kurtzberg

Abstract Many patients with sickle cell disease (SCD) do not have HLA-matched related donors for hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT). Unrelated cord blood (UCB) is an alternative graft option but is historically associated with high graft failure rates, with inadequate cell dose a major limitation. Omidubicel is a nicotinamide-based, ex vivo–expanded UCB product associated with rapid engraftment in adults with hematologic malignancies. We hypothesized that increasing the UCB cell dose with this strategy would lead to improved engraftment in pediatric patients undergoing myeloablative HSCT for SCD. We report the outcomes of a phase 1/2 study in 13 patients with severe SCD who received omidubicel in combination with an unmanipulated UCB graft and 3 who received a single omidubicel graft. Grafts were minimally matched with patients at 4 of 6 HLA alleles. Median age at transplant was 13 years. A median CD34+ expansion of ∼80-fold was observed in omidubicel and led to rapid neutrophil engraftment (median, 7 days). Long-term engraftment was derived from the unmanipulated graft in most of the double cord blood recipients. Two of the 3 single omidubicel recipients also had sustained engraftment. Incidence of acute graft-versus-host disease (GVHD) was high, but resolved in all surviving patients. Event-free survival in the double cord group was 85% (median follow-up 4 years). All 3 patients in the single cord group were alive at 1 year after transplantation. Ex vivo expansion of UCB with omidubicel supports engraftment in patients with SCD. This approach to decreasing the incidence of GVHD should be optimized for general use in patients with SCD. This study was registered at www.clinicaltrials.gov as #NCT01590628.


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