131I-apamistamab conditioning for stem cell transplant in advanced sickle cell disease

Open-label, Single-Center, Phase 1 Study to Estimate the Minimum Effective Dose (MED) of 131I-apamistamab for Non-myeloablative Conditioning in Patients With Severe Sickle Cell Disease

PHASE1 · Columbia University · NCT07015684

This trial tries to see if a targeted radioactive antibody (131I-apamistamab) can be used as the pre-transplant conditioning to prepare people aged 12–50 with advanced sickle cell disease and an HLA-matched sibling donor for an allogeneic stem cell transplant.

Quick facts

PhasePHASE1
Study typeInterventional
Enrollment24 (estimated)
Ages12 Years to 50 Years
SexAll
SponsorColumbia University (other)
Drugs / interventionsradiation, cyclophosphamide, apamistamab, Iapamistamab, apamistmab, chemotherapy
Locations1 site (New York, New York)
Trial IDNCT07015684 on ClinicalTrials.gov

What this trial studies

This is a single-center Phase 1, dose-finding trial that will enroll 24 patients aged 12–50 with advanced sickle cell anemia and an available HLA-matched sibling donor. Investigators will give escalating doses of 131I-apamistamab as part of a nonmyeloablative conditioning regimen alongside agents such as sirolimus and Campath, with procedures like exchange transfusion as indicated. The goal is to identify the minimum effective dose that allows donor engraftment while removing the need for standard total body irradiation. Safety, engraftment, and short-term transplant outcomes will be closely monitored.

Who should consider this trial

Good fit: Ideal candidates are people aged 12–50 with sickle cell anemia (Hb SS, Sβ0 thalassemia, or severe SC) who meet criteria for advanced disease (for example recurrent ACS, frequent vaso-occlusive crises, stroke, or chronic transfusion) and who have an HLA-matched sibling donor.

Not a fit: Patients without an HLA-matched sibling donor, those with milder disease not meeting transplant criteria, or those medically ineligible for allogeneic transplant are unlikely to benefit from this trial.

Why it matters

Potential benefit: If successful, this approach could reduce or eliminate total body irradiation in transplant conditioning and thereby lower long-term risks like infertility, secondary cancers, cataracts, and lung toxicity.

How similar studies have performed: This is the first use of 131I-apamistamab in the SCD transplant setting; other nonmyeloablative and targeted conditioning approaches have shown promise in small studies or in other diseases but have not yet been established for SCD.

Eligibility criteria

Show full inclusion / exclusion criteria
Inclusion Criteria:

* Availability of an HLA-matched sibling donor
* Patients with sickle cell anemia (Hb SS, Sβ0 thalassemia or severe SC) who are 12 - 50 years of age inclusive AND who have 1 or more of the following:

  1. Clinically significant neurologic event (stroke) or any neurological deficit lasting at least 24 hours. Stroke will be defined as a clinically significant neurologic event that is accompanied by an infarct on cerebral MRI or cerebral arteriopathy requiring chronic transfusion therapy.
  2. History of two or more episodes of ACS in the 2-year period preceding enrollment despite supportive care measures (i.e. asthma therapy and/or hydroxyurea).
  3. History of three or more severe vaso-occlusive pain crises per year in the 2-year period preceding enrollment despite the institution of supportive care measures (i.e. a pain management plan and/or treatment with hydroxyurea).
  4. Administration of regular RBC transfusion therapy, defined as receiving 8 or more transfusions per year for 1 year or more to prevent vaso-occlusive clinical complications (i.e. pain, stroke, and ACS)
  5. An echocardiographic finding of tricuspid valve regurgitant jet (TRJ) velocity \> or equal to 2.7 m/sec or pulmonary hypertension diagnosed by right heart catherization.
  6. Sickle hepatopathy defined as EITHER ferritin \>1000mcg/L OR direct bilirubin \>0.4mg/dl but \<5xULN AND platelet count \<250,000/uL at baseline
* Adequate organ functions as defined as:

  1. ECOG performance status of 2 or better
  2. Cardiac function: LVEF of 40% or greater
  3. Pulmonary Function: Pulse oximetry with a baseline oxygen saturation of 85% or greater and corrected DLCO of 40% or greater
  4. Hepatic Function: Serum conjugated (direct) bilirubin less than 5x upper limit of normal for age as per local laboratory, ALT and AST less than 5 x upper limit of normal as per local laboratory. Patients whose hyperbilirubinemia is the result of hyperhaemolysis, or a sever drop in hemoglobin post blood transfusion are not excluded.
  5. Absence of liver cirrhosis, bridging fibrosis and active hepatitis as documented by liver biopsy for patients with evidence of iron overload by serum ferritin or MRI. The histological grading and scale described by Ishak and colleagues (1995) will be used.

Donor Eligibility and Selection Criteria

1. Donor should be evaluated for eligibility to donate by an independent physician not directly caring for the patient on study protocol.
2. Donor is willing to sign informed consent allowing the use of the PBSC product for the HSCT of the recipient.
3. Donor cannot be pregnant or lactating and must agree to contraception until after the donation procedure is complete.
4. Testing negative for HIV and viral hepatitis
5. Free of Hb S (defined as Hb S less than 50%) and other hemoglobinopathies that are symptomatic or of clinical significance.
6. Targeted minimum stem cell dose of 5.0 x 10e6 CD34 cells/Kg of recipient weight
7. Fulfills standard criteria for eligibility as a donor for HSCT.

Note: HSCT can be deleterious for the developing fetus and pregnant mother due to the conditioning regimen, GVHD prophylaxis and treatment. Agents used in this study such as cyclophosphamide are pregnancy risk factor category D. Sirolimus is pregnancy risk factor category C. Radiotherapy also used (TBI) is a well-known teratogenic agent. Should a woman become pregnant or suspect she is pregnant while she or her partner is participating in this study, she should inform her treating physician immediately. Men treated or enrolled on this protocol must also agree to use adequate contraception prior to the study and for at least 1 year post transplant.

Finally, pregnancy and lactation restrictions and contraception requirements are also applicable to the donor. Filgrastim or other G-CSF analogous are pregnancy risk factor category C. The restriction lasts for 4 weeks after stem cell donation.

Exclusion Criteria:

1. Pulmonary dysfunction defined as DLCO (corrected for hemoglobin and alveolar volume) \< 40% of predicted OR baseline oxygen saturation of \<85% or PaO2 \<70.
2. Severe cardiac dysfunction defined as ejection fraction \<35%.
3. Impaired renal function defined as GFR \<40.
4. Hepatic dysfunction defined as bridging (portal to portal) fibrosis or cirrhosis of the liver OR transaminases \>5x ULN for age.
5. Clinical stroke within 6 months of anticipated transplant
6. Karnofsky performance score \< 50%
7. HIV infection
8. Uncontrolled viral, bacterial, fungal, or protozoal infection at the time of study enrollment.
9. Have circulating HAMA noted on initial screening.
10. Have received prior radiation to maximally tolerated levels to any critical normal organs
11. Patients with unspecified chronic toxicity serious enough to detrimentally affect the patient's capacity to tolerate HSCT.
12. Patients' unable to understand the nature and risks inherent in the HSCT process.
13. History of non-compliance severe enough in the estimation of the treating team to preclude the patient from undergoing unrelated donor transplantation.
14. Patient is pregnant or lactating.
15. Inability to provide adequate transfusion support or increased risk immunohematological complications due presence of anti-RBC antibody against stem cell donor.
16. Patients with any history of radiation therapy.

Where this trial is running

New York, New York

Study contacts

How to participate

  1. Review the eligibility criteria above with your treating physician.
  2. Visit the official trial page on ClinicalTrials.gov for the most current contact information and recruitment status.
  3. Contact the listed study coordinator or principal investigator to request pre-screening. Pre-screening is free and never obligates you to enroll.

View on ClinicalTrials.gov →

Conditions: Sickling Disorder Due to Hemoglobin S, severe sickle cell disease, severe SCD, sickle cell disease, sickle cell, advanced SCD, advanced sickle cell disease, anemia

Last reviewed 2026-05-15 by the Find a Trial editorial team. Information on this page is for educational purposes and is not medical advice. Always consult qualified healthcare professionals about clinical trial participation.