| Literature DB >> 26113077 |
P T Vo1, J Pantin2, C Ramos3, L Cook3, E Cho3, R Kurlander4, H Khuu5, J Barrett6, S Leitman7, R W Childs8.
Abstract
Severe aplastic anemia (SAA) is a rare disorder leading to bone marrow failure, which if left untreated, is invariably fatal. Conventional therapies with immunosuppressive therapy or allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT) are highly effective. HSCT can offer a greater outcome in younger patients who have an available HLA match-related donor. Recent studies showing the addition of antithymocyte globulin (ATG) to the conditioning regimen improves engraftment and reduces the risk of graft-versus-host disease (GVHD).There are currently two ATG preparations in the USA, equine (or horse) and rabbit ATG. These agents are pharmacologically distinct, having significant differences in their pharmacokinetics and in vivo immunosuppressive effects [N Engl J Med 365(5):430-438, 2011]. Here, we report a case of two monozygotic twins with constitutional SAA that evolved to myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS) who both underwent allogeneic peripheral blood stem cell transplantation (PBSC) from the same single HLA antigen mismatched sibling donor with the only difference in the transplant regimen being the type of ATG used in the preparative regimen; one twin received horse ATG and the other received rabbit ATG during conditioning. This report emphasizes that dramatic differences in donor T cell chimerism and clinical outcomes including GVHD can occur as a consequence of the type of ATG that is utilized in the transplant conditioning regimen. These differences highlight that these agents should not be considered interchangeable drugs when used in this setting.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26113077 PMCID: PMC4487559 DOI: 10.1186/s13045-015-0173-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Hematol Oncol ISSN: 1756-8722 Impact factor: 17.388
Fig. 1a Twin #1 chimerism timeline. b Twin #2 chimerism timeline
Comparison of clinical data
| Clinical data | Twin #1 | Twin #2 |
|---|---|---|
| Disease progression | ||
| Age of presentation | 2 | 2 |
| Age at transplantation (years) | 9 | 11 |
| Sex | Female | Female |
| Diagnosis | Constitutional SAA with trisomy 8 | Constitutional SAA with trisomy 8 |
| Karyotype at transplant | Trisomy 8 | Trisomy 8 |
| Pre-transplantation characteristics | ||
| Absolute neutrophil count (k/μl) | 417 | 996 |
| Absolute reticulocyte count(k/μl) | 61 | 71.2 |
| Platelets (k/μl) | 16 | 15 |
| Time from diagnose to PBSC (years) | 7 years | 9 years |
| Recipient blood type | AB+ | AB+ |
| Donor relationship | Brother | Brother |
| Donor blood type | A+ | A+ |
| Donor sex | Male | Male |
| HLA match | 9 out of 10 | 9 out of 10 |
| RIC allogeneic PBSC | ||
| Age at transplant | 9 | 11 |
| Recipient blood type | AB+ | AB+ |
| CD34+ cell dose (×106/kg) | 6.24 × 10.6 | 6.32 × 10.6 |
| CD3+ cell dose (×107/kg) | 42.3 × 10.7 | 35.2 × 10.7 |
| Day of 100 % donor T cell chimerism | Day +352 | Day +30 |
| Received DLI and stem cell boost | Yes | No |
| Prophylaxis against GVHD | MTX 5 mg/m2 day +1, +3, +6 | MTX 5 mg/m2 day +1,+3, +6 |
| Cyclosporine | Cyclosporine | |
| Conditioning regimen comparison | ||
| Cyclophosphamide 60 mg/kg IV × 2 | Yes | Yes |
| Fludarabine 25 mg/m2 IVBP × 5 | Yes | Yes |
| Rabbit ATG 3.5 mg/kg IV × 4 | Yes | No |
| Horse ATG 40 mg/kg IV × 4 | No | Yes |
| GVHD prophylaxis | ||
| MTX 5 mg/m2 × 3 | Yes | Yes |
| Cyclosporine | Yes | Yes |
| Post-transplantation GVHD | ||
| Time from HSCT to GVHD (months) | 20 months | <1 month |
| Acute GVHD | No | Yes (grade II GI tract) |
| Site of cGVHD | Skin, mouth | Skin, ocular, and lung |
| cGVHD grade (severity) | Limited | Extensive |
| cGVHD treatment | Daclizumab, cyclosporine | Cyclosporine, sirolimus, MMF, steroid |
| Daclizumab, rituximab, tacrolimus | ||
Fig. 3a, b Twin #2 (left) 5 years and 3 months post-transplant and twin #1 (right) 6 years and 8 months post-transplant. c, d Twin #2 (left) 10 years and 6 months post-transplant and twin #1 (right) 11 years and 11 months post-transplant
Fig. 2Comparison of T cell chimerism between twins