Clinical trial

Identification of Risk Factors and Measures to Prevent Liver and Pancreas Complications in Pediatric Patients Undergoing a Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplant (HSCT)

Name
1105/2015
Description
Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation (HSCT) is currently a standard procedure for a wide range of blood-oncological diseases and genetic disorders. Recent improvements in transplant technologies, infection prevention and graft-versus-host-disease (GVHD) management procedures have significantly reduced the transplant-related mortality (TRM). However, approximately 50% of pediatric patients may develop liver dysfunction before HSCT and 74% to 85.5% after HSCT, with a TRM related to liver dysfunction reaching 46%. The liver and pancreas complications still remain too high for the difficulties and diagnostic inefficiencies and, consequently, for the lack of targeted and safer therapies. The diagnostic problems can be summarized in 3 major points: a) the histological examination of liver and pancreas parenchyma cannot be routinely performed because of the organ anatomy and the relative risk of the bioptic procedures; b) the lack of specific biomarkers or advanced imaging techniques appropriate for the diagnosis of HSCT complications; c) the multifactorial causes of organ complications, as well as drug toxicities, GVHD, siderosis, ductopenia (considered as an index of hepatic GVHD), the accumulation of potentially toxic substances favored by siderosis and ductopenia. In more than 50% of HSCT patients, siderosis and/or ductopenia may represent common pathological conditions. Furthermore, international guidelines issued by onco-hematology and transplantation scientific societies recommend a chelating treatment with deferasirox in all hematological and oncological patients undergoing an intense transfusion regimen. However, in the presence of siderosis and marked ductopenia, patients receiving deferasirox may experience both severe renal and hematological toxicities and lack of effectiveness of the chelating treatment. Therefore, the principal aim of the present retrospective study will be the evaluation of the transplant-related mortality (TRM) in patients requiring a chelation treatment according to the Italian guidelines in pediatric patients
Trial arms
Trial start
2020-09-30
Estimated PCD
2024-06-30
Trial end
2024-12-31
Status
Recruiting
Treatment
Deferasirox
DEFERASIROX administered as per clinical practice and according to technical note
Arms:
Severe Iron Overload (SIO), Severe Iron Overload + Ductopenia (SIO+D)
Other names:
Exjade or Deferasirox Milan
Size
39
Primary endpoint
Transplant-related mortality (TRM)
0-24 months after transplant
Eligibility criteria
Inclusion Criteria: * one or more allogeneic HSCT * any type of disease (blood-oncological or genetic), from any type of donor (sibling, MUD, haploidentical) and with any source of stem cells (spinal cord, peripheral blood stem cells, cord blood) * diagnosis of moderate-to-severe siderosis (by nuclear magnetic resonance imaging, MRI) and who needed a chelation treatment with deferasirox * one or more liver biopsies in the post-transplant period to perform histological examinations * Complete results from lab analyses * 2-year follow-up after HSCT * therapeutic drug monitoring (TDM) protocol for deferasirox plasma concentration as per clinical routine * Sign of the informed consent by the parents or legal representatives Exclusion Criteria: * Lack of liver biopsies after transplantation, results from laboratory analyses or TDM or MRI * Lack of informed consent
Protocol
{'studyType': 'OBSERVATIONAL', 'patientRegistry': False, 'designInfo': {'observationalModel': 'CASE_CONTROL', 'timePerspective': 'RETROSPECTIVE'}, 'enrollmentInfo': {'count': 39, 'type': 'ESTIMATED'}}
Updated at
2023-10-10

1 organization

1 product

1 indication

Organization
University of Pisa
Indication
Hemochromatosis