| Literature DB >> 27872737 |
Franco Aversa1, Lucia Prezioso1, Ilenia Manfra1, Federica Galaverna1, Angelica Spolzino1, Alessandro Monti1.
Abstract
The advantage of using a Human Leukocyte Antigen (HLA)-mismatched related donor is that almost every patient who does not have an HLA-identical donor or who urgently needs hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT) has at least one family member with whom shares one haplotype (haploidentical) and who is promptly available as a donor. The major challenge of haplo-HSCT is intense bi-directional alloreactivity leading to high incidences of graft rejection and graft-versus-host disease (GVHD). Advances in graft processing and pharmacologic prophylaxis of GVHD have reduced these risks and have made haplo-HSCT a viable alternative for patients lacking a matched donor. Indeed, the haplo-HSCT has spread to centers worldwide even though some centers have preferred an approach based on T cell depletion of G-CSF-mobilized peripheral blood progenitor cells (PBPCs), others have focused on new strategies for GvHD prevention, such as G-CSF priming of bone marrow and robust post-transplant immune suppression or post-transplant cyclophosphamide (PTCY). Today, the graft can be a megadose of T-cell depleted PBPCs or a standard dose of unmanipulated bone marrow and/or PBPCs. Although haplo-HSCT modalities are based mainly on high intensity conditioning regimens, recently introduced reduced intensity regimens (RIC) showed promise in decreasing early transplant-related mortality (TRM), and extending the opportunity of HSCT to an elderly population with more comorbidities. Infections are still mostly responsible for toxicity and non-relapse mortality due to prolonged immunosuppression related, or not, to GVHD. Future challenges lie in determining the safest preparative conditioning regimen, minimizing GvHD and promoting rapid and more robust immune reconstitution.Entities:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27872737 PMCID: PMC5111540 DOI: 10.4084/MJHID.2016.057
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mediterr J Hematol Infect Dis ISSN: 2035-3006 Impact factor: 2.576
HSCT outcomes in patients with acute myelogenous leukemia (haplo versus matched sibling donor-MSD, matched unrelated donor-MUD, and unrelated cord blood-UCB).
| HAPLO | MSD | MUD | UCB | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| ||||
| Transplant-Related Mortality | 18% | 24% | 33% | 35% |
|
| ||||
| CD4+ T cells/ | 190 | 229 | 106 | 63 |
|
| ||||
| Cumulative incidence of CMV antigenaemia | 74% | 58% | 60% | 68% |
|
| ||||
| Infection incidence at day +100: | ||||
| Bacterial | 25% | 23% | 36% | 39% |
| Fungal | 11% | 4% | 14% | 14% |
|
| ||||
| Rate of fatal infections | 11% | 4% | 14% | 17% |
Invasive Fungal Infection in unmanipulated Haplo-HSCT.
| # Pts | GvHD prophylaxis | IFI prophylaxis | IFI (%) | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 291 | ATG, CSA, MTX, MMF | fluconazole | 8.25 early phase | Sun et al. [ |
| 80 | ATG, MTX, CSA, MMF, basiliximab | fluconazole | 12.5 early phase | Di Bartolomeo et al [ |
| 50 | PTCY, CSA, MMF | fluconazole | 16 | Raiola et al [ |
| 70 | PTCY, MMF | micafungin | 12 | Crocchiolo [ |
| 26 | PTCY, CSA/FK, MMF (RIC in Hodgkin disease) | fluconazole, or caspofungin followed by itraconazole | 8 | Raiola et al [ |
ATG: anti-thymocyte globulin. CSA: cyclosporine. MTX: methotrexate. MMF: mycophenolate mofetil. PTCY: post-transplant cyclophosphamide. FK: tacrolimus. RIC: reduced intensity conditioning. GVHD: graft vs host disease.
Strategies to decrease infections after haplo-HSCT.
| Revised T cell depleted HSCT | |
|---|---|
| Add back mature donor T cells with a broad repertoire |
- Pathogen-specific T lymphocytes - Suicide gene insertion (HSV-TK) into T cells - iC9-modified T cells - Photodynamic purging of alloreactive T cells - Coinfusion of donor T-regs with conventional T cells |
| Selective T cell depletion |
- CD3-CD19-depletion - αβ TCR/CD19-depletion - CD45RA-depletion |
| Control of GVHD |
- post-transplant Cyclophosphamide |
| Minimal extra-hematological toxicity |
- Reduced intensity conditioning regimens |