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Virus Therapy

Viral-Specific T-cell Therapy for Post-Transplant Viral Infections

Phase 2
Recruiting
Led By Ashok Srinivasan, MD
Research Sponsored by St. Jude Children's Research Hospital
Eligibility Criteria Checklist
Specific guidelines that determine who can or cannot participate in a clinical trial
Must have
Be younger than 65 years old
Timeline
Screening 3 weeks
Treatment Varies
Follow Up 24 hours after infusion
Awards & highlights
No Placebo-Only Group

Summary

This trial tests if donor T-cells can safely treat CMV & ADV infections post-transplant. The primary objective is to reduce viral load & secondary is to measure safety & long-term response.

Who is the study for?
This trial is for patients who've had a specific type of bone marrow transplant and are struggling with CMV or ADV infections that haven't improved after two weeks of standard treatment. They should not have active GVHD, recent donor lymphocyte infusions, or be on high-dose steroids. Women must test negative for pregnancy and all participants need functioning major organs.
What is being tested?
The study is testing if T-cells from donors can fight off stubborn CMV and ADV infections in post-transplant patients. These special cells are selected using an automated device called CliniMACS. The main goal is to see if the virus levels drop significantly within four weeks after getting these T-cells.
What are the potential side effects?
While the document doesn't specify side effects, similar treatments often include risks like infusion reactions, increased infection risk due to immune response changes, potential organ inflammation, and general discomfort at the infusion site.

Timeline

Screening ~ 3 weeks
Treatment ~ Varies
Follow Up ~24 hours after infusion
This trial's timeline: 3 weeks for screening, Varies for treatment, and 24 hours after infusion for reporting.

Treatment Details

Study Objectives

Study objectives can provide a clearer picture of what you can expect from a treatment.
Primary study objectives
Degree of reduction of CMV and/or ADV viral load
Secondary study objectives
Incidence of AEs related to grade 3-4 cytokine release syndrome (CRS), or grade 1-2 CRS persist beyond 72 hours despite therapy
Incidence of Grade 3-4 GVHD
Incidence of Grade 3-4 Neurotoxicity of any duration
+5 more

Awards & Highlights

No Placebo-Only Group
All patients enrolled in this study will receive some form of active treatment.

Trial Design

2Treatment groups
Experimental Treatment
Group I: Cohort BExperimental Treatment2 Interventions
Cohort B will include haploidentical donor who is different from the stem cell donor
Group II: Cohort AExperimental Treatment2 Interventions
Cohort A will include haploidentical donor who is identical to the stem cell donor. The first 5 patients will be enrolled in Cohort A. If safety criteria are met, cohort B will be open for enrollment.
Treatment
First Studied
Drug Approval Stage
How many patients have taken this drug
CliniMACS
2005
Completed Phase 3
~770

Find a Location

Who is running the clinical trial?

St. Jude Children's Research HospitalLead Sponsor
443 Previous Clinical Trials
5,305,434 Total Patients Enrolled
Ashok Srinivasan, MDPrincipal InvestigatorSt. Jude Children's Research Hospital
5 Previous Clinical Trials
435 Total Patients Enrolled
Naik Swati, MDPrincipal InvestigatorSt. Jude Children's Research Hospital

Media Library

VST (Virus Therapy) Clinical Trial Eligibility Overview. Trial Name: NCT05664126 — Phase 2
Adenovirus Research Study Groups: Cohort A, Cohort B
Adenovirus Clinical Trial 2023: VST Highlights & Side Effects. Trial Name: NCT05664126 — Phase 2
VST (Virus Therapy) 2023 Treatment Timeline for Medical Study. Trial Name: NCT05664126 — Phase 2
~40 spots leftby Dec 2026