| Literature DB >> 24174972 |
Martin Mynarek1, Tilmann Schober, Uta Behrends, Britta Maecker-Kolhoff.
Abstract
Patients after solid organ transplantation (SOT) carry a substantially increased risk to develop malignant lymphomas. This is in part due to the immunosuppression required to maintain the function of the organ graft. Depending on the transplanted organ, up to 15% of pediatric transplant recipients acquire posttransplant lymphoproliferative disease (PTLD), and eventually 20% of those succumb to the disease. Early diagnosis of PTLD is often hampered by the unspecific symptoms and the difficult differential diagnosis, which includes atypical infections as well as graft rejection. Treatment of PTLD is limited by the high vulnerability towards antineoplastic chemotherapy in transplanted children. However, new treatment strategies and especially the introduction of the monoclonal anti-CD20 antibody rituximab have dramatically improved outcomes of PTLD. This review discusses risk factors for the development of PTLD in children, summarizes current approaches to therapy, and gives an outlook on developing new treatment modalities like targeted therapy with virus-specific T cells. Finally, monitoring strategies are evaluated.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 24174972 PMCID: PMC3794558 DOI: 10.1155/2013/814973
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Dev Immunol ISSN: 1740-2522
Pediatric and adult PTLD.
| Pediatric PTLD | Adult PTLD | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Reference | Reference | |||
| EBV serostatus at transplantation | ||||
| Negative | 78% | [ | 13%* |
[ |
| Positive | 22% | 87%* | ||
| EBV association of PTLD | 90% | [ | 45% (−69%*) | [ |
| Histology | ||||
| Polymorphic | 16% |
[ | 27%* |
[ |
| Monomorphic | 72% | 65%* | ||
| Hodgkin's disease | 9% | 7%* | ||
| B-cell origin | 97% | 93%* | ||
| T-cell origin | 3% | 6%* | ||
| First-line treatment (B-cell disease) | Rituximab +/− reduced intensity chemotherapy | [ | Rituximab +/− standard chemotherapy | [ |
| Prognosis | 2-year overall survival 80–90% | [ | 2-year overall survival 60–70% | [ |
| Incidence according to transplanted organ | ||||
| Kidney | 2%-3% | [ | 1.0%–2.3% |
[ |
| Liver | 5%–10% | [ | 1.0%–2.3% | |
| Heart | ~6% | [ | 1.0%–6.3% | |
| Lung | ~15% | [ | 2.4%–10.0% | |
| Small bowl | ~20% | [ | 20% | |
*Adult data derived from a KTx population.
Figure 1Time from transplantation to diagnosis of PTLD of 127 patients in the German Ped-PTLD registry. Kaplan-Meyer curve (continuous line) and 95% confidence intervals (dotted curve). Note the rapid increase within the first year and another in the third year.
Figure 2Distribution of histological subtypes of pediatric PTLD reported to the German Ped-PTLD registry.
Selected studies on the treatment of EBV infection or EBV-related posttransplant lymphoproliferation with adoptively transferred EBV-specific T cells.
| Authors | Number of patients | Indication for EBV-CTL | EBV-CTL donor | EBV-CTL preparation* | Number of doses | Total number EBV-CTLs infused | Response in PTLD patients | Complications** | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Gustafsson et al. (2000) | 6 | rising EBV load after HSCT | HSCT-donor | Expansion | 2–4 | 2 × 107/m² to 4 × 107/m² | NA | [ | |
| Haque et al. (2002) | 8 | PTLD after SOT or HSCT | Third-party | Expansion | 1–6 | 1 × 106/kg to 6 × 106/kg | 3/8 CR | [ | |
| Sun et al. (2002) | 2 | 2 PTLD after SOT | Third-party | Expansion | 3 | 1.5 × 107/kg | 2/2 CR | [ | |
| Comoli et al. (2007) | 4 | 1 rising EBV load | HSCT donor | Expansion | 2–4 | 1.5 × 106/kg to 5.5 × 106/kg | 3/3 CR | [ | |
| Gandhi et al. (2007) | 3 | PTLD after SOT | Third party | Expansion | 2–8 | 2 × 106/kg to 16 × 106/kg | 2/3 CR | [ | |
| Haque et al. (2007) | 33 | PTLD after SOT or HSCT | Third-party | Expansion | 4 | 8 × 106/kg | 14/33 CR |
| [ |
| Barker et al. (2010) | 2 | PTLD after CBT | Third-party | Expansion | 5-6 | 5 × 106/kg to 6 × 106/kg | 2/2 CR | [ | |
| Heslop et al. (2010) | 114 | 101 prevention and 13 treatment of PTLD after HSCT | HSCT-donor | Expansion | 1–3 | 2 × 107/m² to 5 × 107/m² | 11/13 CR | Swelling at side of disease | [ |
| Moosmann et al. (2010) | 6 | PTLD after HSCT | HSCT-donor | Caption | 1 | 0.3 × 106 to 7.4 × 106 (abs.) | 3/6 CR | [ | |
| Uhlin et al. (2012) | 1 | PTLD after CBT | Haploidentical, third-party donor | Caption | 1 | 1.1 × 104/kg | 1/1 CR | [ | |
| Doubrovina et al. (2012)*** | 19 | PTLD after HSCT | 14 HSCT-donor | Expansion | 3 | 3 × 106/kg | 13/19 CR | [ | |
| Icheva et al. (2013) | 10 | 2 EBV reactivation | HSCT-donor | Caption | 1-2 | 1.5 × 102/kg to 5.4 × 104/kg | 6/8 CR | Skin-GvHD I-II° in 1/10 pts | [ |
*Expansion: EBV-CTLs were expanded in vitro using repetitive stimulation with autologous, EBV-transformed B cells (lymphoblastoid cell lines (LCL); Caption: EBV-specific T cells were labeled with magnetic beads and isolated via a magnetic column without ex vivo expansion; **restricted to reported CTL-related complications; in regard to GvHD, only de novo GvHD is reported; ***restricted to patients receiving manipulated EBV-CTLs.
CBT: cord blood transplantation; CR: complete remission; EBV-CTL: EBV-specific cytotoxic T-lymphocytes; HSCT: hematopoietic stem cell transplantation; GvHD: graft-versus-host disease; NA: not available; PR: partial response; PTLD: posttransplant lymphoproliferative disease; Pts: patients; SOT: solid organ transplantation.