| Literature DB >> 29299152 |
Sherif S Farag1,2, Robert Nelson1,2, Mitchell S Cairo3, Heather A O'Leary1,2, Shuhong Zhang1, Carol Huntley2, David Delgado4, Jennifer Schwartz1, Mohammad Abu Zaid1, Rafat Abonour1, Michael Robertson1,2, Hal Broxmeyer5,2.
Abstract
Delayed engraftment remains a limitation of umbilical cord blood (UCB) transplantation. We previously showed that inhibition of dipeptidylpeptidase (DPP)-4 using sitagliptin 600 mg daily was safe with encouraging results on engraftment, but inhibition was not sustained. We evaluated the efficacy and feasibility of higher doses of sitagliptin to enhance engraftment of UCB in patients with hematological cancers. Fifteen patients, median age 41 (range, 18-59) years, received single UCB grafts matched at 4 (n=11) or 5 (n=4) of 6 HLA loci with median nucleated cell dose of 3.5 (range, 2.57-4.57) x107/kg. Sitagliptin 600 mg every 12 hours was administered days -1 to +2. All patients engrafted by day 30, with 12 (80%) engrafting by day 21. The median time to neutrophil engraftment was 19 (range, 12-30) days. Plasma DPP-4 activity was better inhibited with a mean residual trough DPP-4 activity of 70%±19%. Compared to patients previously treated with 600 mg/day, sitagliptin 600 mg every 12 hours appeared to improve engraftment, supporting the hypothesis that more sustained DPP-4 inhibition is required. In-vivo inhibition of DPP-4 using high-dose sitagliptin compares favorably with other approaches to enhance UCB engraftment with greater simplicity, and may show synergy in combination with other strategies.Entities:
Keywords: CD26; DPP-4; cord blood; engraftment; leukemia
Year: 2017 PMID: 29299152 PMCID: PMC5746387 DOI: 10.18632/oncotarget.22739
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oncotarget ISSN: 1949-2553
Patient and graft characteristics
| All Patients (N=15) | |
|---|---|
| Age, median (range) years | 41 (18-59) |
| Weight, median (range) kg | 82.1 (51.4-133.5) |
| M/F, n | 6/9 |
| Diagnosis, n | |
| AML | |
| CR1 | 7 |
| CR3 | 1 |
| Primary refractory | 2 |
| ALL | |
| CR1 | 2 |
| Primary refractory | 1 |
| MDS, therapy-related | 1 |
| DLBCL, Relapsed and refractory | 1 |
| Number of prior chemotherapy cycles, median (range) | 3 (1-10) |
| Days from diagnosis to transplant, median (range) | 156 (87-1234) |
| HLA-match, n | |
| 5 of 6 | 4 |
| 4 of 6 | 11 |
| UCB graft characteristics: | |
| Pre-freeze NC, median (range) (x107/kg) | 3.50 (2.57-4.57) |
| Post-thaw viable NC, median (range) (x107/kg) | 2.58 (1.28-3.69) |
| Post-thaw viable cell recovery, median (range) (%) | 72 (47-80) |
| Post-thaw CD34+ cells, median (range) (x105/kg) | 2.5 (1.0-7.0) |
| CFU, median (range) (x104/kg) | 2.3 (1.2-7.0) |
Abbreviations: AML, acute myeloid leukemia; ALL, acute lymphoblastic leukemia; DLBCL, diffuse large B-cell lymphoma; MDS, myelodysplastic syndrome; CR, complete remission; NC, nucleated cell count; CFU, colony forming units.
Figure 1Neutrophil engraftment
(A) Cumulative incidence of neutrophil engraftment comparing patients receiving sitagliptin 600 mg every 12 hours (n=15) in the current trial with also those receiving 600 mg sitagliptin once daily and red blood cell-depleted UCB units, previously reported (n=17).9 (B) Cumulative incidence of neutrophil engraftment comparing patients receiving sitagliptin 600 mg every 12 hours (n=15) in the current trial with an institutional control of 24 patients receiving UCB transplants without sitagliptin during a similar time interval (see text for detail).
Figure 2Plasma DPP-4 activity
DPP-4 activity following the first following dose of sitagliptin (started on day -1) shown as percentages of baseline, comparing the residual activity in patients treated with sitagliptin 600 mg every 12 hours on the current study with those receiving sitagliptin 600 mg once daily (black curve) and red blood cell depleted UCB transplants, previously reported (red curve).9 Times of sitagliptin administration are indicated by “X” at the bottom of the figure.
*Indicate trough levels.