| Literature DB >> 33911199 |
Matthew J Rees1, Peter Mollee2, Jun Yen Ng2, Alex Murton3, Jose Filipe Gonsalves4, Ashish Panigrahi5, Hayley Beer5, Joanna Loh6, Philip Nguyen6, Sam Hunt7, Hayden Jina7, Rebecca Wayte8, Gaurav Sutrave8, Jocelyn Tan9, Chathuri Abeyakoon9, Ashlyn Chee10, Bradley Augustson10, Akash Kalro11, Cindy Lee11, Shivam Agrawal12, Leonid Churilov13, Chong Chyn Chua14, Andrew Boon Ming Lim14, Daniela Zantomio14, Andrew Grigg14.
Abstract
G-CSF only mobilisation has been shown to enhance immune reconstitution early post-transplant, but its impact on survival remains uncertain. We undertook a retrospective review of 12 transplant centres to examine overall survival (OS) and time to next treatment (TTNT) following melphalan autograft according to mobilisation method (G-CSF only vs. G-CSF and cyclophosphamide [CY]) in myeloma patients uniformly treated with bortezomib, cyclophosphamide and dexamethasone induction. Six centres had a policy to use G-CSF alone and six to use G-CSF + CY. Patients failing G-CSF only mobilisation were excluded. 601 patients were included: 328: G-CSF + CY, 273: G-CSF only. Mobilisation arms were comparable in terms of age, Revised International Staging System (R-ISS) groups and post-transplant maintenance therapy. G-CSF + CY mobilisation generated higher median CD34 + yields (8.6 vs. 5.5 × 106/kg, p < 0.001). G-CSF only mobilisation was associated with a significantly higher lymphocyte count at day 15 post-infusion (p < 0.001). G-CSF only mobilisation was associated with significantly improved OS (aHR = 0.60, 95%CI 0.39-0.92, p = 0.018) and TTNT (aHR = 0.77, 95%CI 0.60-0.97, p = 0.027), when adjusting for R-ISS, disease-response pre-transplant, age and post-transplant maintenance therapy. This survival benefit may reflect selection bias in excluding patients with unsuccessful G-CSF only mobilisation or may be due to enhanced autograft immune cell content and improved early immune reconstitution.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33911199 DOI: 10.1038/s41409-021-01300-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Bone Marrow Transplant ISSN: 0268-3369 Impact factor: 5.483