Severe combined immunodeficiency (SCID) is exceedingly rare—about 1 in every 58,000 live births1—yet it carries an outsized clinical urgency. Early hematopoietic stem-cell transplant (HCT) can push 5-year survival above 90 percent, but every delay erodes that advantage.2 In that reality, the timeline from first contact to first dose matters as much as the therapy itself.
Our sponsor’s Phase 1-2 study evaluated a synthetic small-molecule conditioning agent used immediately before HCT. The goal: achieve reliable engraftment and durable immune reconstitution in newly diagnosed SCID infants—while parents were still confronting a life-threatening diagnosis during a global pandemic.
Therapeutic Area |
Autoimmune |
Indication |
Severe Combined Immunodeficiency (SCID) |
Phase |
1-2 safety, efficacy |
Segment |
Pediatric |
Sites |
>10 Sites, USA-only |
Design |
Hematopoietic Cell Transplantation Conditioning to |
In our sponsor’s Phase 1-2 pediatric study, a synthetic small-molecule conditioning agent was evaluated for its ability to prepare infants for HCT and durable immune reconstitution. Three obstacles stood out:
Working with national SCID advocacy groups, the study team hosted virtual lunch-and-learn sessions for frontline immunologists and genetic counselors. Quick-reference pamphlets and two-minute caregiver videos simplified the study’s purpose, schedule, and support resources.
Animated explainer videos (available in English and Spanish) walked parents through conditioning, engraftment, and follow-up requirements, helping them make fully informed decisions despite the emotional shock of diagnosis.
A sponsor-funded travel policy covered flights, lodging, and meals for caregivers. Reimbursements were processed directly through sites, eliminating out-of-pocket strain and reducing last-minute cancellations.
When local rules limited in-person consults, qualifying visits moved to secure video calls. Labs and imaging were scheduled at satellite facilities, and results were uploaded to the EDC within 24 hours.
Protocol-defined visit windows were widened—where medically appropriate—to ±48 hours, letting families synchronize travel with hospital bed availability and airline schedules without jeopardizing dose timing.
Sites with pediatric HCT expertise received central budget and CTA templates, shortening negotiations and freeing coordinators to focus on caregiver coaching rather than paperwork.
Ultra-rare doesn’t have to mean ultra-slow. Learn how our rare-disease trial services combine advocacy alignment, caregiver-centric logistics, and site-startup precision to keep life-saving studies on track.