| Literature DB >> 29021228 |
Jennifer Heimall1, Brent R Logan2, Morton J Cowan3, Luigi D Notarangelo4, Linda M Griffith5, Jennifer M Puck3, Donald B Kohn6, Michael A Pulsipher7, Suhag Parikh8, Caridad Martinez9, Neena Kapoor7, Richard O'Reilly10, Michael Boyer11, Sung-Yun Pai12, Frederick Goldman13, Lauri Burroughs14, Sharat Chandra15, Morris Kletzel16, Monica Thakar17, James Connelly18, Geoff Cuvelier19, Blachy J Davila Saldana20, Evan Shereck21, Alan Knutsen22, Kathleen E Sullivan1, Kenneth DeSantes23, Alfred Gillio24, Elie Haddad25, Aleksandra Petrovic26, Troy Quigg27, Angela R Smith28, Elizabeth Stenger29, Ziyan Yin2, William T Shearer9, Thomas Fleisher30, Rebecca H Buckley8, Christopher C Dvorak3.
Abstract
The Primary Immune Deficiency Treatment Consortium (PIDTC) is enrolling children with severe combined immunodeficiency (SCID) to a prospective natural history study. We analyzed patients treated with allogeneic hematopoietic cell transplantation (HCT) from 2010 to 2014, including 68 patients with typical SCID and 32 with leaky SCID, Omenn syndrome, or reticular dysgenesis. Most (59%) patients were diagnosed by newborn screening or family history. The 2-year overall survival was 90%, but was 95% for those who were infection-free at HCT vs 81% for those with active infection (P = .009). Other factors, including the diagnosis of typical vs leaky SCID/Omenn syndrome, diagnosis via family history or newborn screening, use of preparative chemotherapy, or the type of donor used, did not impact survival. Although 1-year post-HCT median CD4 counts and freedom from IV immunoglobulin were improved after the use of preparative chemotherapy, other immunologic reconstitution parameters were not affected, and the potential for late sequelae in extremely young infants requires additional evaluation. After a T-cell-replete graft, landmark analysis at day +100 post-HCT revealed that CD3 < 300 cells/μL, CD8 < 50 cells/μL, CD45RA < 10%, or a restricted Vβ T-cell receptor repertoire (<13 of 24 families) were associated with the need for a second HCT or death. In the modern era, active infection continues to pose the greatest threat to survival for SCID patients. Although newborn screening has been effective in diagnosing SCID patients early in life, there is an urgent need to identify validated approaches through prospective trials to ensure that patients proceed to HCT infection free. The trial was registered at www.clinicaltrials.gov as #NCT01186913.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29021228 PMCID: PMC5746165 DOI: 10.1182/blood-2017-05-781849
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Blood ISSN: 0006-4971 Impact factor: 22.113