| Literature DB >> 35330826 |
M Y Eileen C van der Stoep1, Lisa V E Oostenbrink2, Robbert G M Bredius2, Dirk Jan A R Moes1, Henk-Jan Guchelaar1, Juliette Zwaveling1, Arjan C Lankester2.
Abstract
Allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT) is an established curative treatment that has significantly improved clinical outcome of pediatric patients with malignant and non-malignant disorders. This is partly because of the use of safer and more effective combinations of chemo- and serotherapy prior to HSCT. Still, complications due to the toxicity of these conditioning regimens remains a major cause of transplant-related mortality (TRM). One of the most difficult challenges to further improve HSCT outcome is reducing toxicity while maintaining efficacy. The use of personalized dosing of the various components of the conditioning regimen by means of therapeutic drug monitoring (TDM) has been the topic of interest in the last decade. TDM could play an important role, especially in children who tend to show greater pharmacokinetic variability. However, TDM should only be performed when it has clear added value to improve clinical outcome or reduce toxicity. In this review, we provide an overview of the available evidence for the relationship between pharmacokinetic parameters and clinical outcome or toxicities of the most commonly used conditioning agents in pediatric HSCT.Entities:
Keywords: HSCT; TDM; conditioning regimen; pediatrics; pharmacokinetics
Year: 2022 PMID: 35330826 PMCID: PMC8940165 DOI: 10.3389/fphar.2022.826004
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Pharmacol ISSN: 1663-9812 Impact factor: 5.810
Reported associations of pharmacokinetic parameters of busulfan and clinical outcomes.
| First author, year |
| Age, median (range) | Diagnosis | Regimen | Dose interval | Major findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| 102 | 3.1 (0.2–21.0) | Malignant: 46 (45%) | BuCyMel: 43 (42%) | Once daily: 64 (63%) | Bu exposure of 72–80 mg*h/L was associated with the highest OS and EFS ( |
| Non-malignant: 56 (55%) | Other: 59 (58%) | 4 times daily: 38 (37%) | ||||
|
| 75 | 6.2 (0.1–20.0) | Malignant (ALL/AML/MDS): 48 (64%) | BuCy: 67 (89%) | 4 times daily | Css,day1 > 600 ng/ml (daily AUC of 14.4 mg*h/L or cumulative AUC of 57.6 mg*h/L) was associated with lower EFS (HR 5.14; 95%CI 2.19–12.07; |
| Non-malignant: 27 (36%) | BuCyVP16: 6 (8%) | |||||
| BuMel: 2 (3%) | ||||||
|
| 674 | 4.5 (0.1–30.4) | Malignant: 274 (41%) | BuCy: 352 (52%) | Once daily: 267 (40%) | Optimum cAUC of 78–101 mg*h/L decreased the probability of graft failure or relapse (HR 0.57; 95%CI 0.39–0.84, |
| Non-malignant: 400 (59%) | BuFlu: 252 (37%) | 4 times daily: 324 (48%) | ||||
| BuCyMel: 70 (10%) | Other: 83 (12%) | |||||
|
| 36 | 5.9 (0.6–19.3) | AML: 23 (63.9%) | BuCy: 33 (91.7%) | 4 times daily | Css,day1 > 600 ng/ml (daily AUC of 14.4 mg*h/L or cumulative AUC of 57.6 mg*h/L) was a significant risk factor for OS (HR 5.2; 95%CI 1.26–21.5, |
| MDS: 13 (36.1%) | BuMel: 2 (6%) | |||||
| BuCyVP16: 1 (2.3%) | ||||||
|
| 293 | 6.2 (0.2–21.0) | Malignant: 170 (58%) | Not clearly specified | 4 times daily: 282 (96%) | The incidence of VOD was 25.6%. Patients with Cmax of ≥1.88 ng/ml were 6 times more likely to develop VOD (63.3 vs. 21.3%, RR 6.0 |
| Non-malignant: 123 (42%) | Once daily: 10 (3.4%0 | |||||
| Twice daily: 1 (0.6%) |
ALL, acute lymphoblastic anemia; AML, acute myeloid leukemia; MDS, myelodysplastic syndrome; Mel, melphalan; Cy, cyclophosphamide; VP16, etoposide.
Reported associations of pharmacokinetic parameters of treosulfan and clinical outcomes.
| First author, year |
| Age, median (range) | Diagnosis | Regimen | Dose | Major findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| 77 | 4.8 (0.2–18.3) | HBP: 31 (40.3%) | TreoFlu: 25 (35.5%) | 3 × 10 g/m2: 12 (15.6%) | High Treo AUC0-∞ (>1,650 mg*h/L per day) was associated with a higher risk of ≥ grade 2 mucositis (OR 7.03; 95%CI 1.60–30.86, |
| Hem. malig: 12 (15.6%) | TreoFluThio: 52 (67.5%) | 3 × 14 g/m2: 65 (84.4%) | ||||
| IEI: 22 (28.5%) | ||||||
| BMF: 11 (14.3%) | ||||||
| Other: 1 (1.3%) | ||||||
|
| 87 | 9.0 (1.5–25) | TM: 87 | TreoFluThio | 3 × 14 g/m2: 87 (100%) | In a |
|
| 87 | 1.6 (0.2–16.7) | IEI: 79 (91%) | TreoFlu | 3 × 10 g/m2: 4 (5%) | Higher cumulative Treo AUC0-∞ showed higher risk of mortality in multivariable analysis (HR 1.32; 95%CI 1.07–1.64, |
| IBD: 5 (5%) | 3 × 12 g/m2: 23 (26%) | |||||
| JMML: 2 (2%) | 3 × 14 g/m2: 60 (69%) | |||||
| IEM: 1 (1%) | ||||||
|
| 110 | 5.2 (0.2–18.8) | IEI: 38 (35%) | TreoFlu: 37 (32%) | 3 × 10 g/m2: 18 (16%) | All grade mucositis was associated with high Treo AUC0-∞ (OR 4.43; 95%CI 1.43–15.50, |
| HBP: 55 (50%) | TreoFluThio: 77 (68%) | 3 × 14 g/m2: 92 (84%) | ||||
| BMF: 17 (15%) |
HPB, hemoglobinopathies; hem. malig, hematological malignancies; IEI, inborn errors of immunity; BMF, bone marrow failure; TM, thalassemia major; IBD, inflammatory bowel disorder; JMML, juvenile myelomonocytic leukemia; IEM, inborn errors of metabolism.
Reported associations of pharmacokinetic parameters of fludarabine and clinical outcomes.
| First author, year |
| Age, median (range) | Diagnosis | Regimen | Dose | Major findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| 133 | 5.0 (0.2–17.9) | Hem. malig: 59 (44%) | BuFlu: 40 (30%) | 3–5 x 40 mg/m2: 55 (41%) | No association with Flu and TRM ( |
| IEI: 18 (14%) | FluCy: 45 (34%) | 3–5 x 12.5–35 mg/m2: 40 (30%) | ||||
| HBP: 8 (6%) | BuFluClo: 18 (14%) | 3–5 x 0.9–1.22 mg/m2: 38 (29%) | ||||
| Metabolic: 22 (16%) | FluThioMel: 15 (11%) | |||||
| BMF: 22 (16%) | Other: 15 (11%) | |||||
| Epidermolysis bullosa: 4 (4%) | ||||||
|
| 53 (no. of children not specified) | 17 (3–57) | AA: 40 (75%) | FluCy: 29 (55%) | 6 × 30 mg/m2 | AUC >29.4 µM*h was a significant factor associated with aGVHD in multivariate analysis ( |
| FA: 13 (25%) | FluCyTBI: 20 (38%) | None of the PK parameters showed any association with engraftment, mixed chimerism, rejection, overall survival or TRM. | ||||
| FluCyATG: 4 (7%) | ||||||
|
| 43 | 11.8 (1.3–18.5) | Acute leukemia: 29 (67.4%) | BuFluVP16: 24 (55.8%) | 6 × 40 mg/m2: 40 (93%) | No significant association was found between AUC and toxicities, GvHD, relapse and survival. |
| Other malig: 2 (4.7%) | BluFlu: 12 (27.9%) | 5 × 40 mg/m2: 3 (7%) | ||||
| Non-malignant: 12 (28%) | BuFluMel: 4 (9.3%) | |||||
| FluCy: 2 (4.7%) | ||||||
| BuFluCy: 1 (2.3%) | ||||||
|
| 192 (119 adults, 73 children | 36.2 (0.23–74) | Benign: 68 (35%) | BuFlu | 4 × 40 mg/m2 | Flu exposure is a predictor for EFS. NRM was increased with high Flu exposure ( |
| Leukemia/lymphoma: 71 (37%) | ||||||
| MDS: 30 (16%) | ||||||
| Plasma cell disorder: 23 (12%) |
AA, aplastic anemia; FA, fanconi anemia; TBI, total body irradiation.
Reported associations of pharmacokinetic parameters of ATG and clinical outcomes.
| First author, year |
| Age, median (range) | Diagnosis | Regimen | Dose ATG | Major findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| 13 | 10 (2–16) | AML: 4 (31%) | TBI/Thio/CY | Thymoglobulin | Weight-based dosing regimen (total dose 10 mg/kg) of Thymoglobulin was effective and well tolerated by all patients. None of the patients developed grade III-IV aGvHD. |
| ALL: 3 (23%) | 10 mg/kg, administered as 1 mg/kg on day -4 and 3 mg/kg/day on days -3 to −1 | |||||
| CML: 3 (23%) | ||||||
| JCML: 2 (15%) | ||||||
| MDS: 1 (8%) | ||||||
|
| 251 | 6.2 (0.2–22.7) | Malignancy: 116 (46%) | RIC | Thymoglobulin | Individualized dosing of ATG could result in improved outcomes. For the CB group, AUC ≥20 AU × day/mL decreased immune reconstitution in CB, but decreased immune reconstitution was noted only if AUC ≥100 AU × day/mL in BM and PB. Successful immune reconstitution by day 100 was associated with increased OS. An AUC before HSCT of ≥40 AU × day/mL resulted in a lower incidence of aGvHD, cGvHD and graft failure compared with an AUC <40 AU × day/mL. |
| IEI: 51 (20%) | MAC – chemo | <9 mg/kg 4% | ||||
| BMF:15 (6%) | MAC - TBI | 9–11 mg/kg 94% | ||||
| Non-malignant: 69 (27%) | >11 mg/kg 2% | |||||
| Day start ATG -5, dose divided over 4 days | ||||||
|
| 137 | 7.4 (0.2–22.7) | ALL: 22 (16%) | Bu-Flu | Thymoglobulin | Low ATG exposure (AUC <16 AU |
| AML: 30 (22%) | Bu-Flu-Clo | Before 2010 | ||||
| Lymphoma: 4 (3%) | TBI based | 10 mg/kg | ||||
| IEI: 33 (24%) | Cy-Flu | Day start ATG -5, dose divided over 4 days | ||||
| BMF: 7 (5%) | After 2010 | |||||
| Benign non-IEI (41 (30%) | <40 kg: 10 mg/kg | |||||
| >40 kg: 7.5 mg/kg | ||||||
| Day start ATG -9, dose divided over 4 days | ||||||
|
| 58 | 9 (1–18) | ALL: 33 (57%) | Chemo + TBI | Thymoglobulin | Active ATG of both ATG products was cleared at different rates, more variability in the Thymoglobulin treated group. Patients treated with Grafalon had a median level of 27.9 AU/mL and with Thymoglobulin 10.6 AU/mL at day 0. Three weeks after HSCT, 15/16 Grafalon patients had an active ATG level <1 AU/mL while 17/42 Thymoglobulin patients had still active ATG levels above this threshold. For Thymoglobulin, exposure to ATG was significantly higher with 10 mg/kg compared to 6–8 mg/kg and was associated with delayed immune recovery. Occurrence of aGvHD (grade III–IV) was highest in the Thymoglobulin low dosage group. |
| 42 Thymoglobulin | 6 (1–17) | AML: 25 (43%) | Chemo | 8.7 (6.0–10.5) mg/kg | ||
| 16 Grafalon | Grafalon | |||||
| 53 (45–60) mg/kg | ||||||
|
| 32 | 5.3 (0.1–17.3) | Non-malignant: 22 (69%) | TreoFluThio | Thymoglobulin | Grafalon and Thymoglobulin show different pharmacological and immunological impact in children. Active plasma levels for Grafalon were less variable compared to Thymoglobulin. Median active peak plasma levels were 77.9 μg/ml for Grafalon and 8.11 μg/ml for Thymoglobulin. Incidence of GvHD was similar for patients with high (above the median) or low (below the median) exposure. Immune recovery of total leucocytes and T cells was delayed in patients with high ATG exposure. No significant difference was found for overall survival. |
| 22 Thymoglobulin | 13.7 (1.5–17.2) | Malignant: 10 (31%) | NMA | 4.5–10 mg/kg | ||
| 10 Grafalon | TBI/VP-16 | Grafalon | ||||
| 30–60 mg/kg |
66 patients (48%) were included in the previous analysis of 2015. (J)CML: (juvenile) chronic myeloid leukemia, RIC, reduced intensity conditioning; MAC, myeloablative conditioning.
Reported associations of pharmacokinetic parameters of alemtuzumab and clinical outcomes.
| First author, year |
| Age, median (range) | Diagnosis | Regimen | Dose alemtuzumab | Major findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| 105 | 4.7 (0.3–27.2) | HLH: 54 (51%) | FluMel | Distal dosing | Peritransplant alemtuzumab levels have impact on the incidence of aGvHD, mixed chimerism and lymphocyte recovery. 18% developed GvHD with alemtuzumab levels ≥0.16 μg/ml, 68% in patients with levels ≤0.15 μg/ml. Mixed chimerism occurred in 21% of the patients with ≤0.15 μg/ml, in 42% with levels between 0.16 and 4.35 μg/ml and in 100% if levels were above 4.35 μg/ml. Patients with levels ≥0.57 μg/ml had lower T-cell counts at day 100. A therapeutic range at day 0 of 0.2–0.4 μg/ml is recommended. |
| BMF: 13 (12%) | 3/10/15/20 mg over days -22 to −19 | |||||
| (S)CID: 17 (17%) | <10 kg: 3/10/10/10 mg | |||||
| CGD: 5 (5%) | Intermediate dosing | |||||
| Metabolic: 4 (4%) | 1 mg/kg over days -14 to −10 | |||||
| SCD: 2 (2%) | Proximal dosing | |||||
| Other: 10 (10%) | 3/10/15/20 mg or 1 mg/kg starting at day -12 or closer to HSCT | |||||
|
| 13 | 15.5 (3–21) | ALL: 8 (61.5%) | FluThioMelRitux | Subcutaneous n = 8 | BSA-based dosing of alemtuzumab is feasible in pediatric haplo-transplantation patients. AUC of alemtuzumab did not have a significant relation with OS, engraftment, IR and GvHD. |
| AML: 3 (23.1%) | Subcutaneous and intravenous n = 5 | |||||
| CML: 1 (7.7%) | Test dose of 2 mg/m2 plus total dose of 45 mg/m2 | |||||
| Therapy-related MDS: 1 (7.7%) | Dose given from days -14 to -11 | |||||
|
| 29 | 6.4 (0.28–21.4) | HLH: 13 (45%) | FluMel | Subcutaneous | Proposed therapeutic range of 0.15–0.6 μg/ml on the day of transplantation is associated with better HSCT outcomes (less aGVHD and improved lymphocyte recovery). To achieve this optimal level allometric or BSA-based dosing is advised. Top-up dose on day -3 for patients who, based on individualized PK estimation, will have a concentration <0.15 μg/ml on the day of transplantation is recommended. |
| CGD: 2 (7%) | 0.5–0.6 mg/kg | |||||
| IPEX: 2 (7%) | 1 mg/kg | |||||
| SAA: 5 (17%) | Dose given days -14 to −10 or -14 – -12 | |||||
| (S)CID: 3 (10%) | Top-up dose was given either on day -3 or -1 | |||||
| Other: 4 (14%) |
HLH, hemophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis; (S)CID, (severe) combined immune deficiency; CGD, chronic granulomatous disease; SCD, sickle cell disease; IPEX, immunodysregulation polyendocrinopathy enteropathy X-linked syndrome; SAA, severe aplastic anemia; Ritux, rituximab.