This research trial is designed to study the safety and effectiveness of combining the study drug, Natalizumab (Tysabri®) with the standard treatment, the use of steroids, as a new treatment for acute graft versus host disease (acute GVHD). GVHD is the most common serious complication, after bone marrow transplant. GVHD occurs when the donor cells (the graft), treat the recipient's body as "foreign" and attack the cells in the recipient's body. During this immune system response, donor cells damage body tissues, such as the skin, liver, stomach, and/or intestines. Acute GVHD can be severe and if severe, potentially fatal to the transplant recipient. Acute GVHD usually happens within the first several months after transplant. The goal of this research is to develop a safer and more effective treatment for acute GVHD, and particularly for acute GVHD that affects the gastrointestinal (or GI) tract, with the ultimate goal being safer and more effective transplant therapies for blood cancers such as leukemia, lymphoma, and multiple myeloma.
The only proven effective treatment for patients with acute graft vs host disease is steroids. Patients not responding to steroid treatment are at high risk for death. Unfortunately, based on the early symptoms, it is not possible to tell whether a patient will respond to steroids, when GVHD is diagnosed and treatment with steroids, such as prednisone, is started. This research trial is designed to study the safety and effectiveness of combining the study drug, Natalizumab (Tysabri®) with the use of steroids to treat acute GVHD in patients at the earliest stages of clinical symptoms, but, by using a proprietary method developed at the University of Michigan and the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, are predicted to be at high risk for not responding to steroid therapy, the standard of care. Investigators at Mount Sinai have developed a research method believed that it might make it possible to predict who is at high risk for not responding to steroids. This method, called Ann Arbor GVHD scoring, uses the levels of naturally occurring chemicals in the blood (called biomarkers) to determine a patient's GVHD score(1, 2, or 3). A hypothesis is that many patients with Ann Arbor score 2 or 3 GVHD, will not respond well to steroid treatment and die within 6 months of their GVHD diagnosis. Most of the deaths are due to intestinal GVHD, which sometimes does not develop, until after standard steroid treatment has already begun. Only patients with Ann Arbor score 2 or 3 GVHD, will be eligible for this study treatment. It is important to understand that Ann Arbor GVHD grading is not approved for clinical use. It can only be used as a test for research purposes. In this study, patients must have their blood tested to determine, if they qualify as Ann Arbor score 2 or 3 GVHD, and must start the study treatment within 3 days of starting systemic steroid treatment for acute GVHD. The study will test whether the investigators can improve steroid response and prevent death from GVHD with the combination therapy, by blocking the donor cells from getting to the intestine and causing damage. Natalizumab (Tysabri®) is a drug that works by blocking the signals that cause immune cells like donor cells, to travel to organs like the intestine or brain. Natalizumab is FDA-approved in adults, to treat Crohn's disease, a chronic condition where immune cells cause damage to the digestive system (such as the stomach, intestines). It is also used to treat multiple sclerosis where immune cells cause damage to the nervous system in the brain. Its intended use is for patients with disease that has not responded to the standard treatment, or cannot tolerate the side effects from standard treatments. Natalizumab has never been used for treating GVHD. It is an experimental drug for this study, because the investigators are investigating a new use for the drug, as a GVHD treatment.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
NA
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
76
Natalizumab 300mg on days 0 and 14.
Prednisone 2mg/kg/d (or methyl-prednisolone IV equivalent)
City of Hope
Duarte, California, United States
Emory University
Atlanta, Georgia, United States
Northwestern
Chicago, Illinois, United States
The University of Kansas Cancer Center
Westwood, Kansas, United States
Massachusetts General Hospital
Boston, Massachusetts, United States
Mayo Clinical
Rochester, Minnesota, United States
Mount Sinai Health System
New York, New York, United States
Columbia University
New York, New York, United States
Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center
New York, New York, United States
Ohio State University
Columbus, Ohio, United States
...and 2 more locations
Number of Participants With Complete Response (CR)
The primary endpoint for this clinical study is the proportion of complete response, CR (that is, the percent of patients with skin, liver, and GI GVHD - all stage 0) at day 28 of study treatment. Stage 0 = no rash, total bilirubin \<2 mg/dl, diarrhea \<500 ml/d
Time frame: Day 28
Number of Participants With Overall Survival (OS)
Number of participants with overall survival at 1 year
Time frame: 1 year
Number of Participants With Non-Relapse Mortality (NRM)
Number of participants with Non-Relapse Mortality (NRM) at 6 months and 1 year
Time frame: 6 months and 1 year
Number of Participants With SR GVHD
Number of participants with steroid-refractory (SR) GVHD to express cumulative incidence of treatment-refractory GVHD (defined as absence of CR or PR on day 28 of treatment or who receive additional immunosuppression prior to day 28)
Time frame: 1 year
Time to Discontinuation of Steroid Therapy
Time in days to discontinuation of steroid therapy.
Time frame: up to 365 days
Number of Participants Who Received Additional GVHD Therapies
Number of participants who received additional GVHD therapies (defined as the initiation of a new acute GVHD therapy, regardless of duration)
Time frame: 1 year
Number of Serious Infections
Number of serious infections (defined as score 3 by the Blood and Marrow Transplant Clinical Trials Network)
Time frame: 6 months
Number of Participants With Overall Response Rate (CR + PR)
Overall response rate (CR + PR) at day 28. Partial Response (PR) is defined as improvement in one or more organs involved with GVHD symptoms without progression in others. For a response to be scored as PR on day 28, the patient must be in PR on day 28 and have had no intervening non-study therapy for acute GVHD.
Time frame: Day 28
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