| Literature DB >> 28759025 |
S Corbacioglu1, E Carreras2, M Ansari3, A Balduzzi4, S Cesaro5, J-H Dalle6, F Dignan7, B Gibson8, T Guengoer9, B Gruhn10, A Lankester11, F Locatelli12, A Pagliuca13, C Peters14, P G Richardson15, A S Schulz16, P Sedlacek17, J Stein18, K-W Sykora19, J Toporski20, E Trigoso21, K Vetteranta22, J Wachowiak23, E Wallhult24, R Wynn25, I Yaniv18, A Yesilipek26, M Mohty27, P Bader28.
Abstract
The advances in hematopoietic cell transplantation (HCT) over the last decade have led to a transplant-related mortality below 15%. Hepatic sinusoidal obstruction syndrome/veno-occlusive disease (SOS/VOD) is a life-threatening complication of HCT that belongs to a group of diseases increasingly identified as transplant-related, systemic endothelial diseases. In most cases, SOS/VOD resolves within weeks; however, severe SOS/VOD results in multi-organ dysfunction/failure with a mortality rate >80%. A timely diagnosis of SOS/VOD is of critical importance, given the availability of therapeutic options with favorable tolerability. Current diagnostic criteria are used for adults and children. However, over the last decade it has become clear that SOS/VOD is significantly different between the age groups in terms of incidence, genetic predisposition, clinical presentation, prevention, treatment and outcome. Improved understanding of SOS/VOD and the availability of effective treatment questions the use of the Baltimore and Seattle criteria for diagnosing SOS/VOD in children. The aim of this position paper is to propose new diagnostic and severity criteria for SOS/VOD in children on behalf of the European Society for Blood and Marrow Transplantation.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28759025 PMCID: PMC5803572 DOI: 10.1038/bmt.2017.161
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Bone Marrow Transplant ISSN: 0268-3369 Impact factor: 5.483
Major differences in hepatic SOS/VOD between adults and children
| Incidence | • Approximately 20% • Up to 60% in high-risk patients | • Approximately 10% |
| Risk factors | Additional pediatric risk factors: • Infants • Pediatric/genetic diseases with incidences above average | • Established risk factors |
| Clinical presentation | • Late-onset SOS/VOD in 20% • Anicteric SOS/VOD in 30% • Hyperbilirubinemia, if present: ○ Is frequently pre-existent ○ Occurs late during SOS/VOD ○ Is typical of severe SOS/VOD | • Late-onset SOS/VOD is rare • Anicteric SOS/VOD is rare |
| Need for proper assessment of ascites and hepatomegaly | • High incidence of disease-related hepatomegaly and ascites pre-HCT | |
| Treatment | • DF for severe SOS/VOD with MOD/MOF was associated with better results in children compared with adults | |
| Prevention | • DF demonstrated efficacy for prevention of SOS/VOD in children in a randomized prospective trial |
Abbreviations: DF=defibrotide; HCT=hematopoietic cell transplantation; MOD/MOF=multi-organ dysfunction/multi-organ failure; SOS/VOD=sinusoidal obstruction syndrome/veno-occlusive disease.
EBMT diagnostic criteria for hepatic SOS/VOD in children
| • No limitation for time of onset of SOS/VOD |
| The presence of two or more of the following |
| • Unexplained consumptive and transfusion-refractory thrombocytopenia |
| • Otherwise unexplained weight gain on three consecutive days despite the use of diuretics or a weight gain >5% above baseline value |
| • |
| • |
| • Rising bilirubin from a baseline value on 3 consecutive days or bilirubin ⩾2 mg/dL within 72 h |
Abbreviations: CT=computed tomography; HCT=hematopoietic cell transplantation; MRI=magnetic resonance imaging; SOS/VOD=sinusoidal obstruction syndrome/veno-occlusive disease; US=ultrasonography.
With the exclusion of other potential differential diagnoses.
⩾1 weight-adjusted platelet substitution/day to maintain institutional transfusion guidelines.
Suggested: imaging (US, CT or MRI) immediately before HCT to determine baseline value for both hepatomegaly and ascites.
EBMT criteria for grading the severity of suspected hepatic SOS/VOD in childrena
| LFT | ⩽2 × normal | >2 and ⩽5 × normal | >5 | |
| Persistent RT | <3 days | 3–7 days | >7 days | |
| Bilirubin (mg/dL) | <2 | ⩾2 | ||
| Bilirubin (μmol/L) | <34 | ⩾34 | ||
| Ascites | Minimal | Moderate | Necessity for paracentesis (external drainage) | |
| Bilirubin kinetics | Doubling within 48 h | |||
| Coagulation | Normal | Normal | Impaired coagulation | Impaired coagulation with need for replacement of coagulation factors |
| Renal function GFR (mL/min) | 89–60 | 59–30 | 29–15 | <15 (renal failure) |
| Pulmonary function (oxygen requirement) | <2 L/min | >2 L/min | Invasive pulmonary ventilation (including CPAP) | |
| CNS | Normal | Normal | Normal | New onset cognitive impairment |
Abbreviations: ALT=alanine transaminase; AST=aspartate transaminase; CNS=central nervous system; CPAP=continuous positive airway pressure; CTCAE=Common Terminology Criteria for Adverse Events; GFR=glomerular filtration rate; GLDH=glutamate dehydrogenase; LFT=liver function test; MOD/MOF=multi-organ dysfunction/multi-organ failure; RT=refractory thrombocytopenia; SOS/VOD, sinusoidal obstruction syndrome/veno-occlusive disease.
If patient fulfills criteria in different categories they must be classified in the most severe category. In addition, the kinetics of the evolution of cumulative symptoms within 48 h predicts severe disease.
Presence of ⩾2 of these criteria qualifies for an upgrade to CTCAE level 4 (very severe SOS/VOD).
Excluding pre-existent hyperbilirubinemia due to primary disease.