Vaccine Therapy in Treating Patients With Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia
Leukemia
About this trial
This is an interventional treatment trial for Leukemia focused on measuring recurrent childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia, recurrent adult acute lymphoblastic leukemia, B-cell childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia, B-cell adult acute lymphoblastic leukemia
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion Criteria B-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia Disease involving at least 30% of bone marrow or circulating blasts In first relapse with at least 1 of the following high-risk features: Age under 1 year at diagnosis Age over 18 years at diagnosis t(9;22) Occurrence of first relapse less than 18 months after diagnosis In second relapse or beyond Refractory disease Successful generation of adequate CD40 ligand-activated autologous tumor cell vaccine Less than 1 year since tumor cell collection Patients in first relapse or beyond must be ineligible for or have declined allogeneic bone marrow transplantation in order to receive study vaccine Patients need not be in complete remission to receive study vaccine Patients may have received an allogeneic hematopoetic stem cell transplant in the past No chemotherapy, radiotherapy, immunotherapy or immunosuppressive treatment or within 3 weeks of vaccination Adequate hepatic function as defined by: Bilirubin < 2x normal; AST < 3x normal; ALT < 6x normal Adequate renal function defined by: Creatinine < 2x normal <1 year since tumor cell collection Exclusion Criteria Concurrent treatment as part of another therapeutic research protocol Pregnancy or nursing mothers Clinically significant pulmonary or cardiac disease Clinically significant autoimmune disease Documented infection that is active and/or not responding to therapy Evidence of HIV infection or known positive HIV serology Lansky performance scale (if <18yo) <60%, Karnofsky performance scale (if >18yo) >60% Once vaccination course has started: patients may not receive chemotherapy, radiotherapy, immunotherapy or immunosuppressive treatment, hematopoetic growth factors. However between tumor cell collection and vaccine administration, patients may receive non-protocol chemotherapy. ********************************************NOTE*************************************************** It is anticipated that there will be a number of patients at first relapse who are eligible for tumor cell collection and vaccine preparation but who are not eligible to receive the vaccination course. These patients will be evaluable for Objective 3.1.1 (feasibility of vaccine preparation). Patients at first relapse who are eligible for vaccine preparation but not administration should instead be treated with standard salvage regimens which may include allogeneic bone marrow transplantation according to the judgement of their primary oncologist. However, these patients represent a population at extremely high risk for progression of their disease following salvage therapy. Many of these patients will therefore be likely to fulfill eligibility criteria for vaccination in the future (i.e. should they relapse again, or fail to enter 2nd complete remission). The majority of those patients who relapse for a second time will do so within 1 year. Those patients who become eligible for vaccination because of 2nd relapse within 1 year of tumor cell collection will receive the original vaccine and will not have further vaccine made from tumor cells collected at the time of 2nd relapse. Given the proliferative thrust of the disease in many patients, it will be advantageous to have vaccines already prepared for these patients to reduce the amount of time from 2nd relapse to vaccination.***
Sites / Locations
- Massachusetts General Hospital Cancer Center
- Dana-Farber Cancer Institute
Arms of the Study
Arm 1
Experimental
CD40 Cell Vaccination
Patients will undergo tumor cell collection followed by vaccine preparation and then vaccination. Autologous acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) cells are harvested, cultured with CD40 ligand, pulsed with keyhole limpet hemocyanin (KLH), and then irradiated to produce the vaccine. Patients receive either 1 x 10^7 or 1 x 10^8 CD40 cells/vaccination depending on the number of tumor cells obtained. Vaccinations are administered every two weeks as outpatient therapy. Evaluable patients receive the course of at least 4 vaccinations at weeks 0, 2, 4, 6. Patients may continue receiving vaccinations every 2 weeks if chemotherapy is not required for symptomatic disease.