| Literature DB >> 26028504 |
Theresa Hahn1, Lara E Sucheston-Campbell2, Kenan Onel3, Marcelo Pasquini4, Philip L McCarthy1, Leah Preus2, Xiaochun Zhu4, John A Hansen5, Paul J Martin5, Li Yan6, Song Liu6, Stephen Spellman7, David Tritchler8, Alyssa Clay2.
Abstract
Clinical trials commonly use adjudication committees to refine endpoints, but observational research or genome-wide association studies rarely do. Our goals were to establish definitions of cause-specific death after unrelated-donor allogeneic hematopoietic cell transplantation (URD-HCT), to estimate discordance between reported and adjudicated cause-specific death, and to identify factors contributing to inconsistency in cause-specific death determination. A consensus panel adjudicated cause-specific death in 1484 patients who died within 1 year after HCT, derived from 3532 acute leukemia or myelodysplasia patients after URD-HCT from 2000 to 2011 reported by 151 US transplant centers to the Center for International Blood and Marrow Transplant Research. Deaths were classified as disease-related or transplant-related. The panel agreed with >99% of deaths reported by centers as disease-related and 80% reported as transplant-related. Year of transplant (cohort effect) and disease status significantly influenced agreement between the panel and centers. Sensitivity analysis of deaths < 100 days post-transplant yielded the lowest agreement between the panel and centers for myelodysplastic syndrome patients. Standard predefined criteria for adjudicating cause-specific death led to consistent application to similar clinical scenarios and clearer delineation of cause-specific death categories. Other studies of competing events such as cancer-specific versus treatment-related mortality would benefit from our results. Our detailed algorithm should result in more consistent reporting of cause-specific death by centers.Entities:
Keywords: Acute leukemia; Adjudication; Allogeneic HCT; Cause-specific mortality
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26028504 PMCID: PMC4537799 DOI: 10.1016/j.bbmt.2015.05.019
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biol Blood Marrow Transplant ISSN: 1083-8791 Impact factor: 5.742