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Clinical Trials/NCT06149832
NCT06149832
Recruiting
Phase 4

Treatment of Oral Chronic Graft-versus-host Disease With Human Umbilical Cord Mesenchymal Stem Cell Dressing

Southwest Hospital, China1 site in 1 country38 target enrollmentStarted: November 30, 2023Last updated:

Overview

Phase
Phase 4
Status
Recruiting
Sponsor
Southwest Hospital, China
Enrollment
38
Locations
1
Primary Endpoint
Oral cGVHD improves condition

Overview

Brief Summary

Chronic graft-versus-host disease (cGVHD) is a clinicopathological syndrome caused by donor lymphocytes attacking the recipient's organs during the process of reestablishing donor immunity after allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (allo-HSCT), with an incidence of about 30%-70%. The clinical manifestations of cGVHD are varied, the course of the disease is prolonged, and the quality of life of patients is affected, and the long-term survival is affected. Among them, oral cGVHD is the most common type, which mainly presents with lichen planus, oral ulcers, mucosal atrophy, erythema and pain. At present, the treatment of oral cGVHD is based on systemic treatment and local hormone-containing gargling solution and local photochemotherapy. The former is easy to be complicated by oral local fungal infection, while the latter has no such equipment in China. Therefore, it is urgent to establish a simple, effective and low-toxicity local treatment for oral cGVHD. Mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) are one of the most widely used cell products in clinic. The combination of MSCS and hematopoietic stem cells can improve the success rate of transplantation and accelerate hematopoietic reconstruction. The applicant team previously completed a national multi-center clinical study on MSCs prevention of cGVHD, which proved that sequential infusion of MSCs can effectively reduce the incidence of cGVHD, and the mechanism is that MSCs regulate Th1: Th2 balance and promote the differentiation of T cells to Th1 direction. Our previous mechanism study provides an important theoretical basis for MSCs treatment of oral cGVHD. According to the clinical needs and the rich experience of our research group in the field of MSCs clinical research, we plan to use dressing containing MSCs for the local treatment of oral cGVHD, so as to improve the lesion degree of oral cGVHD and improve the quality of life of allo-HSCT patients, and provide clinical experience for reference for the local treatment of MSCs graft-versus-host disease.

Study Design

Study Type
Interventional
Allocation
Na
Intervention Model
Single Group
Primary Purpose
Treatment
Masking
None

Eligibility Criteria

Ages
18 Years to 60 Years (Adult)
Sex
All
Accepts Healthy Volunteers
No

Inclusion Criteria

  • No gender limitation, age \<65 years old; KPS score \>60, estimated survival \>3 months.
  • No serious damage to the function of major organs of the whole body.
  • Donor hematopoietic reconstruction was stable (neutrophils \>0.5×10\^9/L, platelets \>20×10\^9/L).
  • Stable control of primary blood diseases.
  • Voluntary examination, informed consent.

Exclusion Criteria

  • Have severe heart, kidney or liver dysfunction.
  • Those combined with other malignant tumors need treatment.
  • There are clinical symptoms of brain dysfunction or severe mental illness and the inability to understand or follow the research protocot
  • Patients who cannot be guaranteed to complete the necessary treatment plan and follow-up observation.
  • Patients with severe acute allergic reactions.
  • Clinically uncontrolled active infection.
  • Patients who are participating in other clinical trials.
  • Researchers believe that the subject is not suitable for clinical trials for other reasons.

Outcomes

Primary Outcomes

Oral cGVHD improves condition

Time Frame: after 2 weeks of treatment

Oral cGVHD score

Secondary Outcomes

No secondary outcomes reported

Investigators

Sponsor
Southwest Hospital, China
Sponsor Class
Other
Responsible Party
Principal Investigator
Principal Investigator

ShiCang Yu

director of Stem cell and regenerative medicine

Southwest Hospital, China

Study Sites (1)

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