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Optimized Cord Blood Transplant with Intermediate Intensity Conditioning Regimen for the Treatment of Relapsed High-Risk Hematologic Cancers after First Donor Stem Cell Transplant

Trial Status: active

This phase II trial studies how well an optimized umbilical cord blood transplant (CBT) with an intermediate intensity conditioning regimen works in treating patients with high-risk blood (hematologic) cancers that have come back (relapsed) after their first donor stem cell transplant. Giving chemotherapy and total-body irradiation (TBI) before a donor CBT helps kill cancer cells in the body and helps make room in the patient's bone marrow for new blood-forming cells (stem cells) to grow. This is called a conditioning regimen. Traditional high-dose conditioning regimens have high toxicity as well as relatively high death rate (mortality). The intermediate intensity conditioning regimen in this trial consists of the drugs fludarabine, cyclophosphamide, and thiotepa, and TBI. Fludarabine is in a class of medications called purine analogs. It works by slowing or stopping the growth of cancer cells in the body. Cyclophosphamide and thiotepa are in a class of medications called alkylating agents. They work by damaging the cell’s DNA and may kill cancer cells. Cyclophosphamide may also lower the body’s immune response. Giving an intermediate intensity conditioning regimen may help to control high-risk hematologic cancers in patients who need a second donor transplantation.