Safety Study of Unlicensed IND Cord Blood Units Manufactured by the National Cord Blood Program for Unrelated Transplantation
This study will evaluate the safety of infusion of the investigational cord blood units by carefully documenting all infusion-related problems.
Inclusion Criteria
- Diagnosis: Patients with disorders affecting the hematopoietic system that are inherited, acquired, or result from myeloablative treatment.
 - Patients: Patients of any age and either gender
 - Cord blood product manufactured by the NCBP (at least one, if the graft contains more than one units)
 
Exclusion Criteria
- Patients who are receiving licensed cord blood products (only)
 - Patients who are receiving unlicensed cord blood products from other banks (only)
 - Patients who are transplanted at non-US transplant centers
 - Patients who are receiving cord blood products that will be "manipulated" post-thaw (e.g., ex vivo expansion, incubation in vitro, etc.)
 
Additional locations may be listed on ClinicalTrials.gov for NCT01656603.
Locations matching your search criteria
United States
California
Duarte
Palo Alto
San Diego
Georgia
Atlanta
Illinois
Chicago
Indiana
Indianapolis
Massachusetts
Boston
Michigan
Detroit
Missouri
Saint Louis
Nebraska
Omaha
New York
Bronx
New York
Ohio
Cleveland
Columbus
Oklahoma
Oklahoma City
Pennsylvania
Philadelphia
South Carolina
Charleston
Texas
Houston
Virginia
Charlottesville
Richmond
Wisconsin
Madison
The primary aim of this study is to examine the safety of administration of the
unlicensed investigational NCBP hematopoietic progenitor cell-cord blood (HPC-CORD BLOOD)
products in a multi-institution setting. Therefore, the study will evaluate prospectively
the incidence of serious adverse reactions as well as the incidence of all infusion
related reactions after administration of the unlicensed, investigational NCBP CBU.
Definitions of Infusion-related adverse reactions:
Mild - Moderate: reactions during or after the infusion of the cord blood (CB) product
that require some medical intervention but do not affect the overall patient status or
outcome.
Severe: serious, life-threatening or fatal infusion reactions, requiring major medical
intervention. These include: anaphylactic shock, acute cardiac, pulmonary or renal
failure, seizures, patient transfer to the Intensive Care Unit, or death within 48 hours
of the CB infusion. Adverse Reactions will also be classified by grade, according to the
Common Terminology Criteria for Adverse Events v4.0 (CTCAE).
Trial PhasePhase II
Trial Typetreatment
Lead OrganizationNew York Blood Center
- Primary ID6637-01
 - Secondary IDsNCI-2016-01676, NCT01861093
 - ClinicalTrials.gov IDNCT01656603