| Literature DB >> 26572736 |
Chiara Cugno1,2, Sara Deola3,4, Perla Filippini5, David F Stroncek6, Sergio Rutella7.
Abstract
Bacterial and fungal infections continue to pose a major clinical challenge in patients with prolonged severe neutropenia after chemotherapy or hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT). With the advent of granulocyte colony-stimulating factor (G-CSF) to mobilize neutrophils in healthy donors, granulocyte transfusions have been broadly used to prevent and/or treat life-threatening infections in patients with severe febrile neutropenia and/or neutrophil dysfunction. Although the results of randomized controlled trials are inconclusive, there are suggestions from pilot and retrospective studies that granulocyte transfusions may benefit selected categories of patients. We will critically appraise the evidence related to the use of therapeutic granulocyte transfusions in children and adults, highlighting current controversies in the field and discussing complementary approaches to modulate phagocyte function in the host.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26572736 PMCID: PMC4647505 DOI: 10.1186/s12967-015-0724-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Transl Med ISSN: 1479-5876 Impact factor: 5.531
Selected list of genes regulating neutrophil function
| Gene | Role(s) in neutrophil homeostasis |
|---|---|
|
| NB1 is a glycosylphosphatidylinositol (GPI)-anchored glycoprotein expressed exclusively by neutrophils, metamyelocytes and myelocytes |
|
| The SOD1 gene encodes superoxide dismutase-1, a major cytoplasmic antioxidant enzyme that metabolizes superoxide radicals to molecular oxygen and hydrogen peroxide. CD177 is upregulated in various inflammatory settings, including bacterial infections. Heterophilic PECAM1/CD177 interactions affect the phosphorylation state of PECAM1, as well as endothelial junction integrity and neutrophil transmigration |
|
| CD64 is the gene encoding human FcγRI (FCGR1), a glycoprotein that is constitutively expressed on human monocytes and macrophages and that plays a pivotal role in the immune response |
|
| The Fc receptor with low affinity for IgG (CD16b) encodes a glycosylphosphatidylinositol (GPI)-anchored protein that is expressed constitutively by neutrophils |
|
| Neutrophil elastase is a serine protease of neutrophil and monocyte granules, with key physiologic roles in innate host defense |
|
| Myeloperoxidase is a lysosomal protein located in the azurophilic granules of polymorphonuclear leukocytes and monocytes. MPO is responsible for microbicidal activity against a wide range of organisms |
|
| Lysozyme catalyzes the hydrolysis of certain mucopolysaccharides of bacterial cell walls |
|
| Neutrophil surface protein that is attached to the membrane via a glycosylphosphatidylinositol anchor. In neutrophils, the |
|
| Homing receptor for lymphocytes to enter secondary lymphoid tissues via high endothelial venules |
Based on current knowledge, a panel of genes was selected that have been shown to contribute to neutrophil function in health and/or disease states. A brief description of the main function of each gene product in neutrophil homeostasis is provided
Fig. 1Abundance of selected transcripts in leukocytes from donors receiving G-CSF. This dataset (http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/sites/GDSbrowser?acc=GDS2959) was selected among studies currently available in NCBI’s Gene Expression Omnibus (GEO; http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/sites/GDSbrowser). In curated datasets, the ‘Data Analysis Tools’ button allows the user to gain access to gene expression levels by directly providing the gene name or symbol. Within non-curated datasets, the GEO2R tool allows the user to select a gene platform and to compare two or more groups of samples in order to identify genes that are differentially expressed across experimental conditions. This study analyzed the genome-wide patterns of gene expression with DNA microarrays (Affymetrix Human Genome U133 Plus 2.0 Array) in five healthy donors given G-CSF [25]. The expression levels of antigens relevant for granulocyte function are shown. Data were compared with the Mann–Whitney U test. A p value <0.05 was considered to denote statistical significance
Fig. 2Abundance of selected transcripts in leukocytes from donors receiving G-CSF and dexamethasone. This dataset was selected among studies currently available in NCBI’s Gene Expression Omnibus (GEO; http//www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/sites/GDSbrowser?acc=GSE12841). Granulocytes were isolated from three individuals before and 18 h after treatment with G-CSF and dexamethasone. Some of the control cells were cultured overnight in HBSS medium with or without the addition of G-CSF and dexamethasone. Total RNA from each experimental condition was compared to pooled RNA of control granulocytes. The genome-wide pattern of gene expression was analyzed with DNA microarrays (Agilent-012391 Whole Human Genome Oligo Microarray G4112A) [23]. Data were compared with the Mann–Whitney U test. A p value <0.05 was considered to denote statistical significance
Clinical trials in children
| # of pts | Clinical trial | Indications for GTX | Remarks/outcome | Reference(s) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 27 | Prospective, phase II | Severe neutropenia and infections | Donor mobilization: 7.5 μg/kg G-CSF; resolution of infection in 92.6 % of patients; 81.5 % OS on day +30; early administration after a median infection period of 6 days | [ |
| 49 | Prospective | Neutropenia and invasive bacterial or fungal infection | Donor mobilization with 5 μg/kg G-CSF + 50 mg PDN. Mixed cohort, including 10 adults; 72 % OS on day +28 and 52 % OS on day +100 | [ |
| 13 | Prospective phase I/II | Neutropenia and severe infection | Donor mobilization with 5–10 μg/kg G-CSF; Collection through the bag method. 69 % OS on day +30 | [ |
| 3 | Prospective | CGD and invasive aspergillosis | Donor’s mobilization with 450 μg G-CSF + 8 mg DXM; one patient died for ARDS, one was lost at follow-up and died 1 year after discharge, one is alive | [ |
| 35 | Retrospective | Febrile neutropenia or defective granulocyte function | Donor mobilization with 480 μg G-CSF + 8 mg DXM; OS 77.1 and 65.7 %, respectively, on day +30 and +60; 82.4 % infection-related OS | [ |
| 32 | Retrospective | Sepsis and neutropenia | Donor mobilization with single-dose lenograstim + DXM 8 mg; 59 % OS (8/32 pts died for the underlying infection and 8/32 pts for non-infectious causes) | [ |
| 16 | Retrospective | Severe neutropenia and documented bacterial and/or fungal infections in HSCT recipients | Donor mobilization with 8 mg DXM after 2007; unstimulated donors before 2007; 50 % OS on day +30 | [ |
| 10 | Retrospective | High risk febrile neutropenia with/without microbiologically documented severe infection | Donor mobilization with 5 μg/kg G-CSF + 8 mg DXM; Clinical response rate 62.9 %, 40 % infection-related mortality, 40 OS % | [ |
| 13 | Retrospective | Febrile neutropenia | Resolution of the documented infection in 9/12 (75 %) pts; good early survival (12/14 courses of GTX, 86 %); poor long-term survival (5/13 pts, 39 %) | [ |
| 13 | Retrospective | Severe infections and neutropenia | Donor mobilization with G-CSF 300 μg from day -3; complete or partial recovery in 6 and 3 of the 15 courses of GTX (40 and 20 % respectively) | [ |
| 13 | Retrospective | Granulocyte dysfunction or severe neutropenia and acute life-threatening infections | Donor mobilization with 600 μg G-CSF + 8 mg DXM; complete or partial clinical response in 12/13 pts (92 %); 15 % infection-related mortality and 42 % OS | [ |
| 3 | Retrospective | Secondary prophylaxis of invasive fungal infections during neutropenic episodes | Donor mobilization with G-CSF; concomitant combination antifungal therapy; no infection-related mortality | [ |
| 3 | Prospective | Prophylaxis in HSC recipients with chronic infections | Donor mobilization with 480 μg G-CSF + 7.5 mg DXM; after transplant, no flares of the infections (active | [ |
| 20 | Prospective | Proven fungal or bacterial infection, unresponsive to anti-microbial therapy (n = 16). Poor control of fungal infection prior to allogeneic HSCT (n = 4) | In the curative group, infection was controlled in 11 out of 16 children. All patients treated pre-emptively survived the HSCT procedure | [ |
| 10 | Prospective | CGD with severe infections | Resolution of infection in 9 out of 10 patients, despite the fact that 8 patients were alloimmunized and had poor recovery of transfused granulocytes | [ |
Completed and ongoing clinical trials of therapeutic granulocyte transfusions in children are summarized
HSCT hematopoietic stem cell transplantation, DXM dexamethasone, OS overall survival, GTX granulocyte transfusions, CGD chronic granulomatous disease
Clinical trials in adults
| # of pts | Study type | Indications for GTX | Remarks/outcome | Reference(s) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 22 | Retrospective | Grade IV febrile neutropenia | G-CSF only for neutrophil mobilization; when >1010 PMNs were infused, clinical benefit compared with historical controls | [ |
| 11 | Case series | Invasive | Ninety-one percent response rate | [ |
| 74 | Retrospective | Treatment of infections | In 34 patients (46 %), GTXs were discontinued due to clinical response and neutrophil count recovery | [ |
| 56 | Retrospective | Severe infection in SAA | GTX + G-CSF; Survival at 30, 90 and 180 days was 89, 70 and 66 %, respectively. Survival rate correlated with hematopoietic recovery | [ |
| 24 | Retrospective | Invasive opportunistic infections | GTX + IFN-γ1b + G-CSF or GM-CSF. 60 % ORR 4 weeks after treatment | [ |
| 25 | Prospective | Progressive uncontrolled infections | Donors given G-CSF and dexamethasone, either alone or in combination. Favorable responses in 40 % of patients (especially in those with fungal or Gram-negative infections). One death from severe pulmonary reaction | [ |
| 20 | Pilot | Neutropenia refractory to G-CSF | Favorable response in 8 out of 15 assessable patients (53 %) | [ |
| 19 | Phase I/II | Infections after HSCT | GTXs from community donors (94 %). G-CSF + dexamethasone. Resolution of infection in 8/19 patients (42 %). Overall, four of the 19 patients were alive on day 30 after HSCT. None of the patients with invasive aspergillosis (n = 5) cleared the infection | [ |
| 30 | Retrospective | Neutropenia and severe infections | G-CSF + dexamethasone. In 11 patients, resolution of infection could be related to granulocyte transfusions. Three of these patients became long-term survivors | [ |
| 52 | Prospective | Control or prevention of severe infections | Control of infections was achieved in 82 % of life-threatening episodes. No reactivation of infections occurred under prophylactic granulocyte transfusions | [ |
| 100 | Randomized (GRANITE study) | Febrile neutropenia | Ongoing national, multi-center trial; Patients aged 1–75 years (www. drks.de/DRKS00000218); Date of first enrollment: October 2014; Arm 1 (intervention-group): transfusion of standardized leukapheresis products of granulocytes on every other day + standard therapy; arm 2 (control group): standard-therapy without granulocyte transfusions | NA |
| 30 | Prospective (GIN1 study) | Febrile neutropenia | Granulocytes derived from whole blood; risk of adverse events comparable to other granulocyte components; recovery of neutrophils and survival in all patients except for two adult patients who died | [ |
| 114 | Randomized (RING study) | Febrile neutropenia | Composite endpoint was survival + microbial response 42 days after randomization; 42 and 43 % success rates for the granulocyte and control groups, respectively | NCT00627393; [ |
Completed and ongoing clinical trials of therapeutic granulocyte transfusions in adults are summarized
HSCT hematopoietic stem cell transplantation, DXM dexamethasone, OS overall survival, ORR overall response rate