| Literature DB >> 26348869 |
Allison A King1, Naynesh Kamani2, Nancy Bunin3, Indira Sahdev4, Joel Brochstein4, Robert J Hayashi1, Michael Grimley5, Allistair Abraham2, Jacqueline Dioguardi2, Ka Wah Chan6, Dorothea Douglas7, Roberta Adams7, Martin Andreansky8, Eric Anderson9, Andrew Gilman10, Sonali Chaudhury11, Lolie Yu12, Jignesh Dalal13, Gregory Hale14, Geoff Cuvelier15, Akshat Jain4, Jennifer Krajewski16, Alfred Gillio16, Kimberly A Kasow17, David Delgado18, Eric Hanson1, Lisa Murray1, Shalini Shenoy1.
Abstract
Fifty-two children with symptomatic sickle cell disease sickle cell disease (SCD) (N = 43) or transfusion-dependent thalassemia (N = 9) received matched sibling donor marrow (46), marrow and cord product (5), or cord blood (1) allografts following reduced intensity conditioning (RIC) with alemtuzumab, fludarabine, and melphalan between March 2003 and May 2014*. The Kaplan-Meier probabilities of overall and event-free survival at a median of 3.42 (range, 0.75-11.83) years were 94.2% and 92.3% for the group, 93% and 90.7% for SCD, and 100% and 100% for thalassemia, respectively. Treatment-related mortality (all related to graft versus host disease, GVHD) was noted in three (5.7%) recipients, all 17-18 years of age. Acute and chronic GVHD was noted in 23% and 13%, respectively, with 81% of recipients off immunosuppression by 1 year. Graft rejection was limited to the single umbilical cord blood recipient who had prompt autologous hematopoietic recovery. Fourteen (27%) had mixed chimerism at 1 year and beyond; all had discontinued immunosuppression between 4 and 12 months from transplant with no subsequent consequence on GVHD or rejection. Infectious complications included predominantly bacteremia (48% were staphylococcus) and CMV reactivation (43%) necessitating preemptive therapy. Lymphocyte recovery beyond 6 months was associated with subsidence of infectious complications. All patients who engrafted were transfusion independent; no strokes or pulmonary complications of SCD were noted, and pain symptoms subsided within 6 months posttransplant. These findings support using RIC for patients with hemoglobinopathy undergoing matched sibling marrow transplantation (*www.Clinical Trials.gov: NCT00920972, NCT01050855, NCT02435901).Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26348869 DOI: 10.1002/ajh.24183
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am J Hematol ISSN: 0361-8609 Impact factor: 10.047