| Literature DB >> 24779895 |
Elodie Elkaim1, Christophe Picard, Claire Galambrun, Vincent Barlogis, Anderson Loundou, Catherine Curtillet, Claire Oudin, Isabelle Thuret, Hervé Chambost, Gérard Michel.
Abstract
This study aimed to describe kinetics of complete donor chimerism occurrence (cDC, >99·9% donor) after unrelated cord blood transplantation (UCBT), to identify its predictive factors and its impact on post-transplant outcome. Ninety-four children who received single UCBT after a myeloablative conditioning regimen had blood chimerism evaluation at predefined post-transplant dates, using a real-time polymerase chain reaction method with 0·1% sensitivity. Cumulative incidence of cDC at 1 year post-transplantation was 61·8%. Three predictive factors were identified in multivariate analysis: history of malignant disease (P = 0·03), older age (above 2·16 years, the first quartile of age, P = 0·0055) and higher level of cord/recipient human leucocyte antigen mismatch (4/6 vs. 5-6/6, P < 0·001) increased the probability of post-transplant cDC. Although graft cell dose had a strong impact on haematological recovery, it did not apparently influence cDC occurrence. Early cDC (i.e. more than 99·9% donor chimerism on days 15-30 post-transplant) appeared useful to predict engraftment (P = 0·003) as well as acute and chronic graft-versus-host disease (GvHD). Severe acute or chronic GvHD never occurred in patients with DC ≤99·9%, suggesting than even minimal residual host haematopoiesis is associated with a very low risk of GvHD after UCBT.Entities:
Keywords: childhood; chimerism; graft-versus-host disease; human leucocyte antigen compatibilty; unrelated cord blood transplantation
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Year: 2014 PMID: 24779895 DOI: 10.1111/bjh.12918
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Br J Haematol ISSN: 0007-1048 Impact factor: 6.998