| Literature DB >> 31749802 |
Ying-Jun Chang1, Xiang-Yu Zhao1, Xiao-Jun Huang1,2.
Abstract
Granulocyte colony-stimulating factor (G-CSF), a growth factor for neutrophils, has been successfully used for stem cell mobilization and T cell immune tolerance induction. The establishment of G-CSF-primed unmanipulated haploidentical blood and marrow transplantation (The Beijing Protocol) has achieved outcomes for the treatment of acute leukemia, myelodysplastic syndrome, and severe aplastic anemia with haploidentical allografts comparable to those of human leukocyte antigen (HLA)-matched sibling donor transplantation. Currently, G-CSF-mobilized bone marrow and/or peripheral blood stem cell sources have been widely used in unmanipulated haploidentical transplant settings. In this review, we summarize the roles of G-CSF in inducing T cell immune tolerance. We discuss the recent advances in the Beijing Protocol, mainly focusing on strategies that have been used to improve transplant outcomes in cases of poor graft function, virus infections, and relapse. The application of G-CSF-primed allografts in other haploidentical modalities is also discussed.Entities:
Keywords: granulocyte colony-stimulating factor; haploidentical stem cell transplantation; poor graft function; relapse; virus infections
Year: 2019 PMID: 31749802 PMCID: PMC6842971 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2019.02516
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
Figure 1Timeline showing the number of haploidentical stem cell transplantation and advances in Peking University Institute of Hematology, 2000–2018. Haplo-SCT, haploidentical stem cell transplantation; G-CSF, granulocyte colony-stimulating factor; HLA, human leukocyte antigen; HM, hematological malignancies; MSDT, HLA-matched sibling donor transplantation; DLI, donor lymphocyte infusion; MUDT, HLA-matched unrelated donor transplantation; SAA, severe aplastic anemia; AML, acute myeloid leukemia; MRD, minimal residual disease; ALL, acute lymphoblastic leukemia; GVHD, graft-vs.-host disease. The red number indicates cumulative cases of patients who underwent haplo-SCT until December 31, 2018.
Figure 2Individual conditioning regimens in the Beijing Protocol. Conditioning regimens for hematological malignancies without total body irradiation (TBI) (A), or with TBI (B), or with reduced intensity (C); for severe aplastic anemia (D); as well as for pediatric adrenoleukodystrophy and mucopolysaccharidosis (E). G-CSF, granulocyte colony-stimulating factor; Ara-C, cytrarabine; CTX, cyclophosphamide; M-CCNU, Semustine; Bu, busulfan; ATG, thymoglobulin; BM, G-CSF-primed bone marrow harvests; PB, G-CSF-mobilized peripheral blood harvests; CSA, cyclosporine; MMF, mycophenolate mofetil; MTX, methotrexate; Flu, fludarabine.
Figure 3Immune regulatory effects of treating healthy donors with granulocyte colony-stimulating factor. Granulocyte colony-stimulating factor (G-CSF) has immune regulatory effects on T cells via direct (light green area) and indirect mechanisms (light gray area). ① ISGF-3 was down-regulated and GATA3 was up-regulated by G-CSF through binding G-CSF receptor, leading to a polarization of T cells from Th1 to Th2 phenotype as well as hyporesponsiveness of T cells (light green area). ② Effects of G-CSF obtained from G-CSF-primed allografts on polarizing T cell from Th1 to Th2. Suppressing T cell proliferation ability by regulatory T cells (Treg), type 1 Treg, CD34+ monocyte, myeloid derived suppressor cells, and CD3+CD4−CD8− T cells obtained from G-CSF-primed allografts either via direct contact, cytokines, such as interleukin-10 and transform growth factor-β, or via other molecules, such as arginase-1 and reactive oxygen species (light gray area). *indicates G-CSF receptor expressed on immune cells, such as myeloid-derived suppressor cells.
Recent trials and results of non-hematological malignancies treated with haploidentical allografts based on immune tolerance induced by G-CSF.
| Xu et al. ( | 52 | SAA | G-BM+G-PB | 13 (10–21) | 14 (7–180) | 39.2% | 38.1% | 15.5% at 1 yr | NA | 82.7 at 3 yr | 84.5 at 3 yr |
| Xu et al. ( | 89 | SAA | G-PB+G-BM (87.6%) | 12 (9–20) | 15 (6–91) | 30.34%% | 39.3% at 3 yr | NA | NA | 85.0% at 3 yr | 86.1% at 3 yr |
| Liu et al. ( | 44 | SAA | G-BM+G-PB | 12 (8–21) | 19 (8–154) | 29.3% | 17.1% | NA | NA | NA | 77.3% at 2 yr |
| Zeng et al. ( | 115 | SAA | G-BM+G-PB | 13 (9–25) | 14 (8–82) | 34.5% | 18.5% at 5 yr | NA | NA | NA | 74.8% at 5 yr |
| Sun et al. ( | 8 | Thalassaemia major | G-PB | 10 (10–15) | 13 (10–102) | 3/8 | 1/8 | 0/8 | NA | 100% at 1 yr | 100% at 1 yr |
| Li et al. ( | 34 | SAA | G-BM+G-PB (94.1%) | 13 (10–20) | 16.5 (7–30) | 14.8% | 26.47% | NA | NA | 93.3% at 5 yr | 79.4% at 5 yr |
| Li et al. ( | 119 | SAA | G-PB+G-BM (73%) | 12 (8–22) | 14 (9–154) | 30% | 27% | NA | NA | NA | 75% at 3 yr |
| Lu et al. ( | 41 | SAA | G-PB+G-BM | 14 (10–21) | 13 (3–56) | 27% | 39% | NA | NA | 76.4% at 3 yr | 80.3% at 3 yr |
| Chen et al. ( | 6 | IMDs | G-PB+G-BM | 12 (11–13) | 12 (10–15) | 4/6 | 1/6 | 0/6 | NA | NA | 100% at 1 yr |
| Wang et al. ( | 35 | SAA | G-PB | 14 (10–22) | 18 (9–36) | 25.71% | 38.58% | 14.29% | NA | NA | 85.71% at 2 yr |
| Yang et al. ( | 20 | SAA | G-PB+G-BM (50%) | 16 (11–26) | 19 (10–34) | 40% | 15% | NA | NA | 80% at 3 yr | 85% at 3 yr |
Published between 2017 and 2019. G-CSF, granulocyte colony-stimulating factor; Pts, patients; No., number; ANC, absolute neutrophil count; PLT, platelet; GVHD, graft-vs.-host disease; cGVHD, chronic GVHD; TRM, transplant-related mortality; FFS, failure-free survival; OS, overall survival; SAA, severe aplastic anemia; G-BM, granulocyte colony-stimulating factor (G-CSF)-primed bone marrow; G-PB, G-CSF-mobilized peripheral blood stem cell grafts; NA, not available; yr, year; IMDs, inherited metabolic storage diseases.
indicate grades III–IV acute GVHD.
Correlation of MRD with clinical outcomes in patients who underwent Haplo-SCT.
| Zhao et al. ( | ALL (543) | Haplo-SCT based on G-CSF | MFC | Positive pre-MRD, except for low level one (MRD < 0.01%), is correlated with higher CIR, and inferior LFS. | Yes |
| Lv et al. ( | Intermediate risk AML (78) | Haplo-SCT based on G-CSF | MFC | Positive MRD (detectable) after two-cycle consolidation is associated with higher CIR and inferior survival. | Yes |
| Liu et al. ( | AML (460) | Haplo-SCT based on G-CSF | MFC | Peri-transplantation MRD (detectable) assessment is useful for risk stratification. | Yes |
| Liu et al. ( | AML (145) | Haplo-SCT based on G-CSF | MFC | Persistent positive MRD (detectable) pre-transplantation predicts poor clinical outcome. | Yes |
| Canaani et al. ( | AML (393) | Haplo-SCT based on G-CSF (27.2%) Haplo-SCT with PTCy (66%) Haplo-SCT with G-CSF+PTCy (6.8%) | MFC | Positive pre-transplant MRD status (detectable) is a predictor of poor prognosis. | Yes |
| Qin et al. ( | AML (14) | Haplo-SCT based on G-CSF (79%) MSDT (21%) | RT-PCR | TLS-ERG transcript levels (>1.0%) predict high-risk of relapse and inferior survival. | No |
| Hong et al. ( | B-ALL (28) | Haplo-SCT based on G-CSF (90%) MSDT (10%) | TR-PCR | The E2A-PBX1 positive (detectable) after transplantation is correlated with poor prognosis. | No |
| Tang et al. ( | AML (53) | Haplo-SCT based on G-CSF (75.5%) MSDT (24.5%) | RT-PCR | Post-transplant CBFB-MYH11 positive (defined as ≤ 3-log reduction in CBFB-MYH11 transcripts compared with the pre-treatment baseline level) could predict poor outcomes. | No |
| Zhao et al. ( | T-ALL (29) | Haplo-SCT based on G-CSF (90%) MSDT (10%) | RT-PCR | Pre- or post-transplantation SIL-TAL1 positive (detectable) is associated with higher CIR and inferior DFS and OS. | No |
| Liu et al. ( | AML (16)/ALL (24) | Haplo-SCT based on G-CSF (75%) MSDT (10%) Other alternative modality (15%) | RT-PCR | MLL gene positive after transplantation (detectable) is associated with higher CIR and inferior DFS and OS. | Yes |
| Wang et al. ( | ALL (92) | Haplo-SCT based on G-CSF (48%) MSDT (48%) Other alternative modality (4%) | RT-PCR | Positive MRD (defined as ≤ 3-log reduction in RUNX1/RUNX1T1 transcripts when compared with the pre-treatment baseline level) at 1, 2, and 3 months after transplantation predicts higher CIR and inferior survival. | Yes |
| Zhou et al. ( | ALL (139) | Haplo-SCT based on G-CSF (76%)MSDT (24%) | MFC | Positive MRD post-transplantation (detectable) is associated with high risk of relapse and inferior survival. | Yes |
| Zhou et al. ( | AL (138) | Haplo-SCT based on G-CSF (58%) MSDT (29%) Other alternative modalities (13%) | RT-PCR | The WT1 expression level (≥0.60%) after transplantation is associated with higher CIR and inferior survival. | Yes |
MRD, minimal residual disease; Haplo-SCT, haploidentical stem cell transplantation; Ref., reference; Pt., patients; No., number; G-CSF, granulocyte colony-stimulating factor; MFC, multiparameter flow cytometry; CIR, cumulative incidence of relapse; LFS, leukemia-free survival; AML, acute myeloid leukemia; PTCy, post-cyclophosphamide; RT-PCR, real-time quantitative polymerase chain reaction; MDST, human leukocyte antigen-matched sibling donor transplantation; AL, acute leukemia.
Informative trials and results regarding G-CSF-primed allografts used in haplo-SCT with PTCy.
| Solomon et al. ( | 20 | HM | 44 (25–56) | MAC | G-PB | 30% | 35% | 10% at 1 yr | 40% at 1 yr | 50% at 1 yr | 69% at 1 yr |
| Raj et al. ( | 55 | HM+SAA | 49 (14–69) | RIC | G-PB | 61% at 1 yr | 18% at 2 yr | 23% at 2 yr | 28% at 2 yr | 66% at 1 yr | 78% at 1 yr |
| Nakamae et al. ( | 20 | HM | 47 (18–65) | MAC | G-PB | 60% | 10% | 11% at 1 yr | 53% at 1 yr | 35% | 55% at 1 yr |
| Sugita et al. ( | 31 | HM | 48 (21–65) | RIC | G-PB | 23% | 15% at 1 yr | 23% at 1 yr | 45% at 1 yr | 34% at 1 yr | 45% at 1 yr |
| Jaiswal et al. ( | 20 | HM | 12 (2–20) | MAC | G-PB | 35% | 5% | 20% at 1 yr | 25.7% | 59.2% at 2 yr | 64.3% at 2 yr |
| Moiseev et al. ( | 86 | AML/ALL | 34 (18–59) | MAC | G-PB | 19% | 16% | 16% at 2 yr | 19% at 2 yr | 65% at 2 yr | 69% at 2 yr |
| González-Llano et al. ( | 25 | HM | 10 (1–21) | MAC | G-PB | 43% | 15% | 36% at 1 yr | 40% at 1 yr | 33% at 1 yr | 50% at 1 yr |
| Bashey et al. ( | 190 | HM | 47 (19–73) | MAC | G-PB | 42% at 6 mon | 41% at 2 yr | 17% at 2 yr | 28% at 2 yr | 54% at 2 yr | 57% at 2 yr |
| Hong et al. ( | 34 | HM | 11.1 (0.9–20.3) | MAC | G-PB | 38.2% | 9.1% at 2 yr | 2.9% at 2 yr | 21.7% at 2 yr | 79.4% at 2 yr | 85% at 2 yr |
| Ruggeri et al. ( | 191 | AML/ALL | 18.3 (1.6–50.5) | RIC (51%) | G-PB | 28% | 35% at 1 yr | 23% at 2 yr | 22% at 2 yr | 51% at 2 yr | 55% at 2 yr |
| Granata et al. ( | 181 | HM | 60 (19–73) | MAC | G-PB | 23% | 17% at 2 yr | 21% at 2 yr | 17% at 2 yr | 62% at 2 yr | 66% at 2 yr |
| Sugita et al. ( | 127 | HM+Others | 36 (17–60) | MAC (39%) | G-PB | 18% | 36% at 2 yr | 10% at 2 yr | 36% at 2 yr | 54% at 2 yr | 68% at 2 yr |
| 58 (22–65) | RIC (61%) | G-PB | 14% | 27% at 2 yr | 20% at 2 yr | 45% at 2 yr | 35% at 2 yr | 44% at 2 yr | |||
Haplo-SCT, haploidentical stem cell transplantation; PTCy, post-cyclophosphamide; Pts, patients; No., number; GVHD, graft-vs.-host disease; cGVHD, chronic GVHD; TRM, transplant-related mortality; DFS, disease-free survival; OS, overall survival; HM, hematological malignancies; MAC, myeloablative conditioning regimen; G-PB, G-CSF-mobilized peripheral blood stem cell grafts; yr, year; SAA, severe aplastic anemia; RIC, reduced intensity conditioning regimen.
indicates that the cumulative incidence of cGVHD was 35% after 20 months (range: 10–36 months) for surviving patients.
indicates that the estimated 1-year EFS is 35 and 33%, respectively, for these two studies.
indicates that the cumulative incidences of grade II and grade III acute GVHD at 1 year were 53 and 8%, respectively.
indicates that at a median of 185 days, a cumulative incidence of disease progression was 25.7%.