DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH & HUMAN SERVICES Public Health Service
Food
and Drug Administration
1401 Rockville Pike
Rockville, MD 20852-1448
Center for Biologics
Evaluation and Research
Biological Response
Modifiers Advisory Committee
SUMMARY MINUTES
Meeting #34, February 27,
2003
Holiday Inn, Silver Spring,
Maryland
COMMITTEE MEMBERS TEMPORARY
VOTING MEMBERS
Daniel R. Salomon, M.D., Chair Mary
Horowitz, M.D.
Jonathan Allan, D.V.M Jeanne V. Linden,
M.D.
Bruce R. Blazar, M.D.* David F. Stroncek,
M.D.
David M. Harlan, M.D.
Katherine A. High, M.D. GUEST SPEAKERS
Joanne Kurtzberg, M.D. Nelson J.
Chao, M.D., M.P.H.
Alison F. Lawton Pablo
Rubinstein, M.D.
Richard C. Mulligan, Ph.D. John E. Wagner, M.D.**
Mahendra S. Rao, M.D., Ph.D.
Anastasios A. Tsiatis, Ph.D. FDA PARTICIPANTS
Alice J. Wolfson, Esq. Philip
Noguchi, M.D.
Ruth Solomon, M.D.
NIH REPRESENTATIVE Ellen
Lazarus, M.D.
Lianna
Harvath, Ph.D.** Stephen
Litwin, M.D.
COMMITTEE MANAGEMENT SPECIALIST
Rosanna L. Harvey
EXECUTIVE SECRETARY *not attending
Gail M. Dapolito **FDA
Consultant
The summary minutes for the February 28, 2003
meeting of the Biological Response Modifiers Advisory Committee were approved
on .
I certify that I attended the February 28, 2003
meeting of the Biological Response Modifiers Advisory Committee and that this
report accurately reflects what transpired.
_________________________ ________________________________
Gail Dapolito, Executive Secretary Daniel R. Salomon, M.D.,
Chair
FDA
BIOLOGICAL RESPONSE MODIFIERS ADVISORY COMMITTEE
SUMMARY MINUTES
MEETING #34, February 27, 2003
The Biological Response Modifiers Advisory Committee (BRMAC) met on February 27, 2003 at the Holiday Inn, Silver Spring, MD. In open session, the committee discussed issues related to the use of unrelated allogeneic hematopoietic stem/progenitor cells from placental/umbilical cord blood for hematopoietic reconstitution.
Daniel Salomon, M.D., Chair, called the meeting to order and introduced the members, consultants, guests and guest speakers. The executive secretary read the conflict of interest statement into the public record. This statement identified members and consultants of the committee with an appearance of a conflict of interest, who were issued waivers to participate. Copies of the waivers are available from the FDA Freedom of Information Office.
The FDA provided an analysis of clinical outcome data submitted to the FDA regarding the safety and efficacy of cord blood for hematopoietic reconstitution. Guest experts provided the most recent data on clinical studies of unrelated donor umbilical cord blood transplantation in children and adults.
The Chair commenced the Open Public Hearing. During the Open Public Hearing, patients, parents and families of patients addressed the committee regarding their experiences and views on cord blood transplantation to treat oncologic, genetic and metabolic disorders. The comments highlighted concerns related to licensing, ethnic/racial distributions, time to procedure, impact on families and patients, age of recipients and informed consent. The committee also heard comments from the St. Louis Cord Blood Bank and the International Bone Marrow Registry.
The committee deliberations focused on 1) factors the agency should consider in determining the safety and effectiveness for the use of placental/umbilical cord blood (UCB) transplantations for hematopoietic reconstitution, 2) the role of CD 34+ cell count in selection of UCB and 3) other measures of quality that should be considered.
1) Factors to consider
Specific disease indications:
The committee agreed that umbilical cord blood transplantation is an accepted approach in a variety of diseases. The committee agreed that current available outcome data for bone marrow (BMT), peripheral blood stem cell (PBSC) and umbilical cord blood (UCB) transplantation do not support recommendations for the preferential use of BMT vs UCB for particular disease indications, rather the decision should depend on medical judgment and availability.
The committee agreed that, in general, results of cord blood transplantation are very similar to results of bone marrow/peripheral blood transplantation. The most significant differences concern current cord blood transplantation protocols that operate at the limits of cell dose and a more extensive experience with outcomes of multiply mismatched cord blood transplants vs. bone marrow transplants.
BRMAC
Meeting #34, February 27, 2003
Summary Minutes
Page 2
The committee also stated that criteria for obtaining cord blood should be equally as stringent as the criteria for obtaining donor marrow, including a requirement to report outcome data.
Maximum number of HLA mismatches permitted for UCB
transplantation:
The committee stated there are insufficient data to evaluate UCB transplants HLA mismatched by 3 or more antigens. Therefore, the committee recommended UCB transplants be limited to 2 or less HLA mismatches - as defined by current standard low-intermediate level resolution HLA typing for class I and high resolution typing for Class II. The committee also stated research needs to continue to provide further data on transplants of 3 or more HLA mismatches.
Incidence of graft vs. host disease:
The committee generally agreed that the incidence of acute GVHD in UCB transplant recipients is no worse than GVHD in BMT recipients, and could be better, but that this comparison is difficult due to inter-center variability in grading of GVHD.
Time
to engraftment:
The committee agreed that time to engraftment (neutrophil and platelet recovery) is longer for cord blood than for other sources of hematopoietic stem/progenitor cells, regardless of cell dose. However, engraftment after cord blood transplantation is durable (low risk of secondary graft failure) and the delayed engraftment does not appear to affect overall survival. The committee also recognized that some data indicate a dramatic difference in time to recovery and ultimate engraftment when cell dose (TNC or CD34+ dose) is a factor.
Age of patients to be
transplanted:
The committee stated age does not differentially impact BMT or UCB transplantation provided the cell dose is adequate.
Cell Dose
In general the committee agreed on a recommended post-processing (pre-thaw) target dose of 25M total nucleated cells (TNC)/kg, with the provision that the individual transplant centers validate 70% or greater cell recovery post-thaw.
Additional comments from the committee on this point included:
A recommendation that informed consent include information on cell dose to provide patients with the information necessary to make an informed choice about accepting a lower cell dose, than the target dose, if no other suitable hematopoietic stem cell product is available.
A recommendation for development of a thawing procedure certification program for transplant centers.
A recommendation that FDA mandate collection of outcome data for retrospective assessment of product efficacy and quality assurance.
BRMAC
Meeting #34, February 27, 2003
Summary Minutes
Page 3
Recommendations for additional
outcome data to collect prospectively in future trials
The committee agreed general outcome parameters recommended for other types of hematopoietic stem cell transplantation trials are suitable for UCB trials with the addition of routine chimerism studies in experimental UCB trials. Individual committee members listed several outcome parameters of interest including survival, disease-free survival, time to engraftment, time to hematopoietic recovery, immune reconstitution.
2) Role of CD34+ cell count in selection of
UCB
This parameter is an effective predictor of engraftment. However, the committee agreed that TNC also predicts engraftment and it is not necessary to also know the number of CD34+ cells in the unit for purposes of selection of a unit for transplantation.
Minimum number of CD34+
cells below which a product should not be considered for transplantation
The committee issued no consensus statement on this point. Some committee members commented that there are no standardized enumeration assays to assess CD34+ cell number.
3) Other parameters of quality that should be considered
The committee discussed confirmatory HLA typing pre-transplant. Some committee members recommended
confirmation of HLA typing at either cord bank or transplant center prior to
release of product for transplantation.
The committee also recommended that this testing be done on a sample
from a contiguously attached segment, whenever
possible, as a measure to detect errors in product labeling and thus prevent inadvertent transplant of incompatible units