This is a phase I/II clinical trial using adoptive cell therapy with NK cells or memory T cells in patients affected by COVID-19. Severe cases with COVID-19 present a dysregulated immune system with T cell lymphopenia, specially NK cells and memory T cells, and a hyper-inflammatory state. This clinical trial proposes the use of cell therapy for the treatment of patients with worse prognosis due to SARS-CoV-2 infection (those with pneumonia and/or lymphopenia). This is an innovative and a non-pharmacological intervention.
In this phase I/II trial natural killer (NK) cells or memory T lymphocytes will be infused from donors who have recovered from COVID-19 and have complete resolution of symptoms for at least 14 days. There will be two arms based on the biology of the donor and the patient: Arm 1. Infusion of memory T cells from HLA partially match donors which have the SARS-COV-2 memory T cell repertoire. Arm 2. Infusion of NK cells which are cells of the innate immune system that can eliminate virally infected cells. The investigators expect a quick recovery of the patients with pneumonia or lymphopenia for two reasons: 1. The pool of memory T cells will increase in patients. Memory T cell levels are low in these patients. These lymphocytes have long-life memory, which upon reencountering SARS-CoV-2 will induce enhanced effector function resulting in greater protection of the patient. 2. NK cells act quickly after a viral infection. The number and function of NK cells correlates with the severity of another coronavirus infection, Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS), originated in China in 2002. Moreover, the investigators have previous successful experience with other viruses such as CMV, EBV and HHV-6. Patients who have recovered from COVID-19 are the ideal donor candidates because they have immune cells with memory against SARS-CoV-2. Therefore, the infusion of NK and memory T cells from these donors will increase the pool of cells with cytotoxicity to virally infected cells, and will increase the pool of memory cells that respond quicker to a previously encountered stimulus. This will impact in saving thousands of lives, releasing hospital beds, reducing the costs of a national health system and improving the economy of a locked-down country. Cell therapies are safe and cost-effective and successfully used in other diseases. The investigators need new innovative treatments where others have failed. We have performed the phase I: Arm 1.Phase I single-center dose-escalation in 9 patients infused with memory T cells from a HLA partially match convalescent donor. Arm 2. Phase I single-center dose-escalation in 6 patients infused with NK cells from convalescent donors. We evaluate the safety, and feasibility, and obtained the RP2D of a single infusion. We have performed the phase II with memory T cells: The phase II for the infusion of memory T cells from HLA partially match convalescent donors has been carried out. 84 patients have been enrolled and randomized into the SoC treatment or the SoC plus the infusion of memory T cells.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
TRIPLE
Enrollment
84
Single infusion of NK or memory T cells from a healthy donor recovered from COVID-19 (dose escalation).
Hospital Universitario La Paz
Madrid, Spain
Phase I: Occurrence of DLTs in all patients during the study treatment, until 21 days after cell infusion and the MTD
Any grade 3 or higher toxicity with an attribution of definitely or probably related to the infusion of the cells and any lower grade toxicity that increases to a grade 3 or higher as a direct result of the cell infusion.
Time frame: 3 months
Phase II
Phase II primary outcome is the incidence of patient recovery infusing adoptive NK cells or adoptive memory T cells. Recovery is defined as the proportion of participants in each group with normalization of fever and oxygen saturation (criteria for normalization: temperature \< 38°C armpit, and SpO2 \> 94%, sustained for at least 24 h) or lymphopenia recovery through day 14.
Time frame: 3 months
Secondary Outcomes
Time (days) to normal level of lymphocytes. Proportion of patients showing clinical improvement at day 7 according to the investigator (based on respiratory status and blood-result tests). Proportion of patients receiving a second cycle. Time (days) to first negative SARS-CoV-2 PCR after infusing adoptive NK cells or adoptive memory T cells. The incidence of treatment-related adverse events (new or worsening from baseline) Duration (days) of hospitalization. Time (days) to discharge or to a NEWS of ≤ 2 and maintained for 24 hours, whichever comes first. Time to improvement by one category on a 7-point ordinal scale. Subject clinical status (on a 7-point ordinal scale) at day 14. Proportion of patients requiring intensive care unit. All-cause mortality at Day 28.
Time frame: 3 months
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