| Literature DB >> 32236525 |
Shernan G Holtan1, Andrea L Hoeschen2, Qing Cao3, Mukta Arora1, Veronika Bachanova1, Claudio G Brunstein1, Jeffrey S Miller1, Armin Rashidi1, Arne Slungaard1, Celalettin Ustun4, Gregory M Vercellotti1, Erica D Warlick1, Brian C Betts1, Najla El Jurdi1, Fiona He1, Chi Chen5, Isha Gandhi6, John E Wagner7, Bruce R Blazar7, Pamala Ann Jacobson8, Ashraf Shabaneh9, Jinhua Wang9, Angela Panoskaltsis-Mortari7, Margaret L MacMillan7, Daniel J Weisdorf1.
Abstract
Acute graft-versus-host disease (aGVHD) is a potentially fatal complication of allogeneic hematopoietic cell transplantation that fails to improve with intense immunosuppression in some patients. We hypothesized that urinary-derived human chorionic gonadotropin (uhCG) could help facilitate resolution of life-threatening aGVHD when added as supportive care via 2 potential mechanisms: immunomodulation (akin to its role in pregnancy) and supplementation of epidermal growth factor (EGF; to aid in epithelial repair). In a phase 1 study, 26 participants received subcutaneous injections of uhCG in addition to standard immunosuppression (13 receiving initial therapy for high-risk aGVHD [according to the Minnesota criteria] and 13 receiving second-line therapy). Participants underwent serial blood testing for biomarkers of hormone response, immune modulation, and aGVHD activity on study. uhCG was well tolerated, with no dose-limiting toxicities. Sixty-two percent of patients in the high-risk cohort and 54% of patients in the second-line cohort had a complete response at study day 28. Plasma EGF was elevated sixfold (from 4 to 24 pg/mL; P = .02) at 6 hours postdose in the high-risk cohort, in contrast to no peak in plasma EGF in the more severe second-line cohort. After 1 week of uhCG, patients reported a twofold increase in the regulatory T cell to conventional T-cell ratio, suggesting immune modulation despite high-dose steroids. Responding patients reported significantly lower plasma amphiregulin and higher plasma butyrate levels at study completion, suggesting improvement in mucosal damage over time. uhCG is a novel, safe, supportive therapy, proceeding to phase 2 testing at 2000 units/m2 in high-risk aGVHD. This study was registered at www.clinicaltrials.gov as #NCT02525029.Entities:
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Year: 2020 PMID: 32236525 PMCID: PMC7160256 DOI: 10.1182/bloodadvances.2019001259
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Blood Adv ISSN: 2473-9529