| Literature DB >> 34719735 |
Riad El Fakih1, Feras Alfraih2, Saud Alhayli2, Syed Osman Ahmed2, Marwan Shaheen2, Naeem Chaudhri2, Fahad Alsharif2, Amr Hanbali2, Alfadel Alshaibani2, Ahmad S Alotaibi2, Bander Alharbi2, Faisal Mohammed AlYahya3, Wedian M Rawas2, Emad Ghabashi2, Ahmed Kotb2,4, Tusneem Elhassan2, Walid Rasheed2, Hazzaa Alzahrani2, Fahad Almohareb2, Ali Alahmari2, Mahmoud Aljurf2.
Abstract
Priming donors with G-CSF before BM harvest is reported to improve engraftment and GvHD in recipients. These effects are highly desirable when transplanting patients with non-neoplastic hematologic diseases, particularly AA patients. Here we retrospectively report the outcomes of 39 AA patients receiving a primed BM graft from MSD to 43 patients receiving a steady-state BM graft from MSD, otherwise transplanted using a uniform transplant platform. The graft had higher TNC and CD34 cell concentrations in the primed group (p < 0.001), and that was reflected in higher TNC and CD34 doses per kilogram of recipient in the primed group (p = 0.004 and 0.03, respectively). The OS for primed BM graft recipients was 97.4% and 78.9% for the steady-state BM graft recipients, p-value = 0.01. The cumulative incidence of death without GF was 2.6% in the primed group and 16.3% in the steady-state group, p-value = 0.03. There was no difference in GvHD incidence between the two groups. We confirm that priming improved the TNC and CD34 graft concentration and cell dose; this evidence along with other reported studies constitute reasonable evidence to prove that BM priming improve engraftment. We observed no increase in GvHD using primed BM graft.Entities:
Keywords: Graft; MSD; Mobilized donors; Primed BM; SAA; Steady-state BM
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34719735 DOI: 10.1007/s00277-021-04708-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ann Hematol ISSN: 0939-5555 Impact factor: 3.673