Melphalan is a chemotherapy drug used extensively in bone marrow transplantation. The goal of this study is to determine what causes some children to have different drug concentrations of melphalan in their bodies and if drug levels are related to whether or not a child experiences severe side-effects during their bone marrow transplant. The hypothesis is that certain clinical and individual factors cause changes in melphalan drug levels in pediatric bone marrow transplant patients and that high levels may cause severe side-effects.
Melphalan is an alkylating agent with potent antitumor and immunosuppressive properties used in conditioning regimens of pediatric allogeneic hematopoietic cell transplantation (alloHCT) to promote stem cell engraftment. This is a single-center, prospective, non-interventional pharmacokinetics (PK) study investigating the clinical pharmacology of melphalan in 24 children undergoing allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplant (alloHCT) at University of California, San Francisco Benioff Children's Hospital. Patients would receive melphalan regardless of whether or not they decide to consent to PK sampling. Melphalan doses will not be adjusted based on PK data. The investigators will apply the combination of a limited sampling strategy and population PK methodologies to determine specific factors influencing melphalan exposure in pediatric alloHCT recipients. Population PK methodologies support the use of sparse sampling and therefore allow us to investigate drug levels in a pediatric population that would otherwise not be feasible using traditional intensive PK sampling. Subjects will undergo PK sampling of plasma melphalan drug concentrations over the duration of melphalan therapy (3 to 5 days). To evaluate sources of variability impacting melphalan exposure clinical data will be obtained from the patient's medical chart on each day of PK sampling. To assess exposure-response relationships neutrophil engraftment, treatment-related toxicity, and survival data will be collected through day 100 post-transplant.
Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Enrollment
25
University of California, San Francisco
San Francisco, California, United States
Analysis of the Area under the Plasma Concentration versus Time Curve (AUC) of melphalan for HCT in pediatric patients.
Time frame: 5min post end of infusion
Analysis of the Area under the Plasma Concentration versus Time Curve (AUC) of melphalan for HCT in pediatric patients.
Time frame: 15 min post end of infusion
Analysis of the Area under the Plasma Concentration versus Time Curve (AUC) of melphalan for HCT in pediatric patients.
Time frame: 30 min post end of infusion
Analysis of the Area under the Plasma Concentration versus Time Curve (AUC) of melphalan for HCT in pediatric patients.
Time frame: 1 hr post end of infusion
Analysis of the Area under the Plasma Concentration versus Time Curve (AUC) of melphalan for HCT in pediatric patients.
Time frame: 2 hrs post end of infusion
Evaluate the event free survival according to the AUC of melphalan
Time frame: 1month post transplant
Evaluate the event free survival according to the AUC of melphalan
Time frame: 3 months post transplant
Evaluate the event free survival according to the AUC of melphalan
Time frame: 1 year post transplant
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