| Literature DB >> 35589997 |
John A Snowden1, Isabel Sánchez-Ortega2, Selim Corbacioglu3, Grzegorz W Basak4, Christian Chabannon5, Rafael de la Camara6, Harry Dolstra7, Rafael F Duarte8, Bertram Glass9, Raffaella Greco10, Arjan C Lankester11, Mohamad Mohty12, Bénédicte Neven13, Régis Peffault de Latour14, Paolo Pedrazzoli15, Zinaida Peric16, Ibrahim Yakoub-Agha17, Anna Sureda18, Nicolaus Kröger19.
Abstract
Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35589997 PMCID: PMC9119216 DOI: 10.1038/s41409-022-01691-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Bone Marrow Transplant ISSN: 0268-3369 Impact factor: 5.174
EBMT categorisation of type of indication for transplant procedures and strength of evidence.
| Categories | Settings where HCT ought to be performed |
|---|---|
| Standard of care (S) | Indications reasonably well defined and results compare favourably (or are superior) to those of non-transplant treatment approaches. Obviously, defining an indication as the standard of care does not mean an HCT is necessarily the optimal therapy for a given patient in all clinical circumstances. ‘Standard of care’ transplants may be performed in a specialist centre with experience in HCT and an appropriate infrastructure as defined by the JACIE standards. |
| Clinical option (CO) | Indications for which the results of small patient cohorts show efficacy and acceptable toxicity of the HCT procedure, but confirmatory randomised studies are missing, often as a result of low patient numbers. The broad range of available transplant techniques combined with the variation of patient factors such as age and co-morbidity makes interpretation of these data difficult. Our current interpretation of existing data for indications placed in this category supports that HCT is a valuable option for individual patients after careful discussions of risks and benefits with the patient, but that for groups of patients the value of HCT needs further evaluation. Transplants for indications under this heading should be performed in a specialist centre with major experience in HCT with an appropriate infrastructure as defined by JACIE standards. |
| Developmental (D) | Indications when the experience is limited, and additional research is needed to define the role of HCT. These transplants should be done within the framework of a clinical protocol, normally undertaken by transplant units with acknowledged expertise in the management of that particular disease or that type of HCT. Protocols for D transplants will have been approved by local research ethics committees and must comply with current international standards. Rare indications where formal clinical trials are not possible should be performed within the framework of a structured registry analysis, ideally an EBMT non-interventional/observational study. Centres performing transplants under this category should meet JACIE standards. |
| Generally not recommended (GNR) | Comprises a variety of clinical scenarios in which the use of HCT cannot be recommended to provide a clinical benefit to the patient, including early disease stages when results of conventional treatment do not normally justify the additional risk of an HCT, very advanced forms of a disease in which the chance of success is so small that does not justify the risks for patient and donor, and indications in which the transplant modality may not be adequate for the characteristics of the disease. A categorisation as GNR does not exclude that centres with particular expertise on a certain disease can investigate HCT in these situations. Therefore, there is some overlap between GNR and D categories, and further research might be warranted within prospective clinical studies for some of these indications. |
| Grade | |
| Grade I | Evidence from at least one well-executed randomised trial. |
| Grade II | Evidence from at least one well-designed clinical trial without randomisation; cohort or case-controlled analytic studies (preferably from more than one centre); multiple time-series studies; or dramatic results from uncontrolled experiments. |
| Grade III | Evidence from opinions of respected authorities based on clinical experience, descriptive studies, or reports from expert committees. |
Proposed classification of transplant indications for adults—2022.
| Disease | Disease status | MSD allo | MUD allo | MMAD allo | Auto | CAR-T |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| AMLa | CR1 (favourable risk and MRD–)b | GNR/II | GNR/II | GNR/II | CO/I | |
| CR1 (favourable risk and MRD+)b | S/II | CO/II | CO/II | GNR/II | ||
| CR1 (intermediate risk)b | S/II | CO/II | CO/II | CO/I | ||
| CR1 (adverse risk)b | S/II | S/II | S/II | GNR/I | ||
| CR2 | S/II | S/II | S/II | CO/II | ||
| APL Molecular CR2 | S/II | CO/II | GNR/III | S/II | ||
| Relapse or refractory | CO/II | CO/II | CO/II | GNR/III | ||
| ALLa | Ph (–), CR1 (standard risk and MRD–)b | GNR/II | GNR/II | GNR/III | CO/III | |
| Ph (–), CR1 (standard risk and MRD+)b | S/II | CO/II | CO/II | GNR/II | CO/II | |
| Ph (–), CR1 (high risk)b | S/II | S/II | CO/II | GNR/III | ||
| Ph (+), CR1 (MRD–) | S/II | S/II | CO/II | CO/III | ||
| Ph (+), CR1 (MRD+) | S/II | S/II | S/II | GNR/II | ||
| CR2 | S/II | S/II | S/II | GNR/II | ||
| Relapse or refractory | CO/II | CO/II | CO/II | GNR/III | ||
| CML | 1st CP, failing 2nd or 3rd line TKI | S/II | S/II | CO/III | GNR/II | |
| Accelerated phase, blast crisis or >1st CP | S/II | S/II | CO/II | GNR/III | ||
| Myelofibrosis | Primary or secondary with an intermediate-2 or high DIPSS score | S/II | S/II | S/III | GNR/III | |
| MDS | Very low and low-risk (IPSS-R) | CO/II | CO/II | CO/II | GNR/III | |
| Intermediate-risk without additional factorsc (IPSS-R) | CO/II | CO/II | CO/II | CO/II | ||
| Intermediate-risk with additional factorsc (IPSS-R) | S/II | S/II | S/II | GNR/III | ||
| High-, very high-risk (IPSS-R) | S/II | S/II | S/II | |||
| sAML in CR1 or CR2 | S/II | S/II | ||||
| CMML | CMML-2 or MP-CMML | S/II | S/II | S/II | GNR/III | |
| CMML-0 or CMML-1 with additional risk factorsd | S/II | S/II | S/II | GNR/III | ||
| CLL | Poor risk disease refractory or relapsing after at one line of prior therapy (Richter’s transformation excluded) | CO/II | CO/II | GNR/III | GNR/III | CO/II |
| Richter transformation | S/II | S/II | S/II | GNR/III | CO/II | |
| LBCL | CR1 (intermediate/high IPI at diagnosis) | GNR/III | GNR/III | GNR/III | CO/I | GNR/III |
| Untested relapse | GNR | GNR | GNR | GNR | S/I | |
| Chemosensitive early relapse, ≥CR2 | CO/II | CO/II | D/III | CO/I | S/II | |
| Chemosensitive late relapse, ≥CR2 | CO/II | CO/II | D/III | S/II | CO/II | |
| Chemosensitive relapse after auto-HSCT failure | CO/II | CO/II | CO/III | GNR/III | S/II | |
| Refractory disease | CO/II | CO/II | CO/III | GNR/I | S/I | |
| Primary CNS lymphoma | GNR/III | GNR/III | GNR/III | S/II | D/III | |
| FL | CR1, untransformed | GNR/III | GNR/III | GNR/III | GNR/II | GNR/III |
| CR1, transformed into high-grade lymphoma | GNR/III | GNR/III | GNR/III | CO/III | GNR/II | |
| Chemosensitive relapse, ≥CR2 | CO/III | CO/III | GNR/III | S/II | GNR/III | |
| ≥CR2 after auto-HSCT failure | S/II | S/II | D/III | GNR/III | CO/II | |
| Refractory | CO/II | CO/II | CO/III | GNR/III | CO/II | |
| MCL | CR1 | GNR/III | GNR/III | GNR/III | S/I | GNR/III |
| CR/PR >1, no prior auto-HCT | CO/III | CO/III | D/III | CO/II | S/II | |
| CR/PR >1, after prior auto-HCT | CO/II | CO/II | CO/III | GNR/II | S/II | |
| Refractory | CO/II | CO/II | CO/III | GNR/II | S/II | |
| WM | CR1 | GNR/III | GNR/III | GNR/III | GNR/III | GNR/III |
| Chemosensitive relapse, ≥CR2 | GNR/III | GNR/III | GNR/III | CO/II | GNR/III | |
| Poor risk disease | CO/II | CO/II | D/III | GNR/III | GNR/III | |
| PTCL | CR1 | CO/II | CO/II | GNR/III | CO/II | GNR/III |
| Chemosensitive relapse, ≥CR2 | S/II | S/II | CO/III | CO/II | GNR/III | |
| Refractory | CO/II | CO/II | CO/III | GNR/II | GNR/III | |
| Primary CTCL | EORTC/ISCL Stages I–IIA (early) | GNR/III | GNR/III | GNR/III | GNR/III | GNR/III |
| EORTC/ISCL Stages IIB–IV (advanced) | CO/III | CO/III | D/III | GNR/III | GNR/III | |
| HL | CR1 | GNR/III | GNR/III | GNR/III | GNR/I | GNR/III |
| Chemosensitive relapse, no prior auto-HCT | D/III | D/III | GNR/III | S/I | GNR/III | |
| Chemosensitive relapse, after prior auto-HCT | S//II | S/II | S/II | CO/III | GNR/III | |
| Refractory | D/II | D/II | D/III | CO/III | GNR/III | |
| MM | Upfront standard risk | CO/II | CO/II | GNR/III | S/I | |
| Upfront high risk | S/III | S/III | CO/II | S/I | ||
| Chemosensitive relapse, prior auto-HCT | CO/II | CO/II | CO/II | S/II | GNR/III | |
| Refractory/relapse after three lines of prior therapy including an immunomodulatory agent, a proteasome inhibitor and an anti-CD38 | S/II | |||||
| AL | CO/III | CO/III | GNR/III | CO/II | ||
| Acquired SAA and AA/PNH | Newly diagnosed | S/II | CO/II | GNR/III | NA | |
| Relapsed/refractory | S/II | S/II | CO/II | NA | ||
| Haemolytic PNH | GNR/II | GNR/II | GNR/II | NA | ||
| Constitutional BMF syndromes/SAAe | S/II | S/II | CO/II | NA | ||
| Breast Ca | Adjuvant high risk, selected population | NA | NA | NA | D/CO/I | |
| Metastatic, chemosensitive | D/II | NA | NA | D/CO/II | ||
| Germ cell tumours | Second line, high risk | GNR/III | NA | NA | CO/II | |
| Primary refractory, second and further relapse | GNR/III | NA | NA | S/II | ||
| Ovarian Ca | High risk/recurrent | GNR/II | NA | NA | GNR/I | |
| Medulloblastoma | Post-surgery, high risk/recurrent disease | NA | NA | NA | CO/III | |
| Small cell lung Ca | Limited | NA | NA | NA | GNR/I | |
| Soft tissue Sa | Advanced | D/III | NA | NA | D/II | |
| Ewing’s Sa | Locally advanced/metastatic, chemosensitive | D/III | NA | NA | CO/II | |
| Renal cell Ca | Metastatic, refractory to conventional treatments | D/II | NA | NA | NA | |
| Colorectal Ca, pancreatic Ca, other selected solid tumours | Metastatic, refractory to conventional treatments | D/III | NA | NA | NA | |
| Multiple sclerosis | Highly active RR-MS failing DMT | D/III | GNR/III | GNR/III | S/I | |
| Progressive MS with AIC, and Aggressive MSf | D/III | GNR/III | GNR/III | CO/II | ||
| Progressive MS without AIC | GNR/III | GNR/III | GNR/III | GNR/III | ||
| Systemic sclerosis | D/III | GNR/III | GNR/III | S/I | ||
| SLE | D/III | GNR/III | GNR/III | CO/II | ||
| Crohn’s disease | D/III | D/III | D/III | CO/II | ||
| Rheumatoid arthritis | D/III | GNR/III | GNR/III | CO/II | ||
| JIA | CO/II | CO/II | CO/III | CO/II | ||
| Monogenic AD | CO/II | CO/II | CO/III | GNR/II | ||
| Vasculitis | ANCA+ve, BD, Takayasu, others | GNR/III | GNR/III | GNR/III | CO/II | |
| PM-DM | GNR/III | GNR/III | GNR/III | CO/II | ||
| Autoimmune cytopenias | CO/II | CO/II | CO/III | CO/II | ||
| Neuromyelitis optica | D/III | D/III | D/III | CO/II | ||
| CIDP, MG and SPS | GNR/III | GNR/III | GNR/III | CO/II | ||
| Type 1 diabetes | GNR/III | GNR/III | GNR/III | D/II | ||
| RCD type II | GNR/III | GNR/III | GNR/III | CO/II | ||
| Primary ID | CO/II | CO/II | CO/II | NA | ||
This classification does not cover patients for whom a syngeneic donor is available.
AA aplastic anaemia, AD autoimmune disorders, AIC active inflammatory component, AL amyloidosis, ALL acute lymphoblastic leukaemia, Allo allogeneic transplantation, AML acute myeloid leukaemia, APL acute promyelocytic leukaemia, Auto autologous transplantation, Ca cancer or carcinoma, CAR-T chimeric antigen receptor T cells, CIDP chronic inflammatory demyelinating polyneuropathy, CLL chronic lymphocytic leukaemia, CML chronic myelogenous leukaemia, CMML chronic myelomonocytic leukaemia, CO clinical option (can be carried after careful assessment of risks and benefits), CP chronic phase, CR1, 2, 3 first, second, third complete remission, CTCL cutaneous T-cell lymphoma, D developmental (further trials are needed), DIPSS dynamic international prognostic score system, DMT disease-modifying treatments, FL follicular lymphoma, GNR generally not recommended, HL Hodgkin lymphoma, HCT haematopoietic cell transplantation, ID immunodeficiency, IPI international prognostic index, IPSS-R revised International Scoring System, JIA juvenile idiopathic arthritis, LBCL large B-cell lymphoma, MCL mantle cell lymphoma, MDS myelodysplastic syndromes, MG myasthenia gravis, MM multiple myeloma, MMAD mismatched alternative donors (cord blood, haploidentical and mismatched unrelated donors), MP-CMML myeloproliferative CMML, MRD minimal residual disease, MS multiple sclerosis, MSD matched sibling donor, MUD well-matched unrelated donor (8/8, 10/10, or 9/10 if mismatched is in DQB1), NA not applicable, PM-DM polymyositis-dermatomyositis, PNH paroxysmal nocturnal haemoglobinuria, PR partial remission, RA refractory anaemia, RAEB refractory anaemia with excess blasts, RCD refractory coeliac disease, RCMD refractory cytopenia with multilineage dysplasia, RR-MS relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis, S standard of care (generally indicated in suitable patients), Sa sarcoma, SAA severe aplastic anaemia, sAML secondary acute myeloid leukaemia, SLE systemic lupus erythematosus, SPS stiff person syndrome, TCL T-cell lymphoma, TKI tyrosine kinase inhibitors, WM Waldenström macroglobulinemia.
aSome centres consider older age (e.g., >60 years) as a criterion for high-risk disease in decision making for allogeneic HSCT for AML or ALL. Beyond transplant indications, maintenance therapy after transplant is being increasingly used with the aim of improving survival outcomes (e.g., FLT3 inhibitors in FLT3-ITD AML [346]).
bCategories are based on number of white blood cells, cytogenetics and molecular markers at diagnosis and time to achieve remission (see text).
cAdditional factors include >5% marrow blasts, poor karyotype, profound cytopenias (i.e., Hb <80 g/L, ANC <0.8 × 109/L, platelets <50 × 109/L), or severe BM fibrosis.
dAdditional high-risk gene mutations (ASXL1, RUNX1, SETBP1, N-RAS), severe cytopenia or transfusion dependency, excessive proliferative features or extramedullary involvement.
eConstitutional SAA includes Fanconi anaemia, dyskeratosis congenita, Blackfan–Diamond anaemia and other inborn bone marrow failure syndromes (see also the section and table for paediatric indications).
fAggressive MS as per Menon et al. [347].
Proposed classification of transplant indications for children and adolescents—2022.
| Disease | Disease status and subtypes | MSD allo | MUD allo | MMAD allo | Auto |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| AML | CR1 (low risk)a | GNR/II | GNR/II | GNR/III | GNR/II |
| CR1 (high and very high risk)a | S/II | S/II | CO/II | GNR/II | |
| CR2 | S/II | S/II | S/II | GNR/II | |
| >CR2 | S/II | CO/II | CO/II | GNR/II | |
| ALL | CR1 (low risk)a | GNR/II | GNR/II | GNR/III | GNR/II |
| CR1 (high risk)a | S/II | S/II | CO/II | GNR/II | |
| CR2 | S/II | S/II | CO/II | GNR/II | |
| >CR2 | S/II | S/II | CO/II | GNR/II | |
| CML | 1st CP, failing 2nd or 3rd line TKI | S/II | S/II | CO/II | GNR/III |
| Accelerated phase, blast crisis or >1st CP | S/II | S/II | CO/II | GNR/III | |
| MDS and JMML | S/II | S/II | CO/III | GNR/III | |
| NHL | CR1 (low risk) | GNR/II | GNR/II | GNR/II | GNR/II |
| CR1 (high risk) | CO/II | CO/II | CO/II | CO/II | |
| CR2 | S/II | S/II | CO/II | CO/II | |
| HL | CR1 | GNR/II | GNR/II | GNR/II | GNR/II |
| 1st relapse, CR2 | CO/II | CO/III | CO/III | S/II | |
| Primary ID | SCID | S/II | S/II | S/II | NA |
| Non-SCID CID | S/II | S/II | S or CO/II | NA | |
| Primary HLH | S/II | S/II | S/II | NA | |
| Other primary ID | S/II | S/II | CO/II | NA | |
| MPS | MPS-1H | S/II | S/II | S/II | NA |
| Wolman diseaseb | CO/III | CO/III | CO/III | NA | |
| MPSII–VIIb | CO/II | CO/II | CO/II | NA | |
| MLD | S/II | S/II | CO/II | ||
| PSD | X-ALD | S/II | S/II | CO/II | NA |
| Thalassaemia and SCD | S/II | CO/II | CO/II | NA | |
| Osteopetrosis | S/II | S/II | S/II | NA | |
| IBMFS | S/II | S/II | CO/II | NA | |
| Acquired SAA | S/II | S/II | CO/II | NA | |
| Germ cell tumours | CO/II | CO/II | CO/II | CO/II | |
| Sarcoma | Ewing’s sarcoma (high risk or >CR1) | D/II | D/III | D/III | S/II |
| Soft tissue sarcoma (high risk or >CR1) | D/II | D/II | D/III | CO/II | |
| Osteogenic sarcoma | GNR/III | GNR/III | GNR/III | D/II | |
| Neuroblastoma | High risk or >CR1 | CO/II | CO/II | D/III | S/II |
| Brain tumours | GNR/III | GNR/III | GNR/III | CO/II | |
| Wilms’ tumour | >CR1 | GNR/III | GNR/III | GNR/III | CO/II |
| AD | Including monogenic AD | CO/II | CO/II | CO/II | CO/II |
This classification does not cover patients for whom a syngeneic donor is available.
AD autoimmune disorders, ALL acute lymphoblastic leukaemia, Allo allogeneic transplantation, AML acute myeloid leukaemia, Auto autologous transplantation, CML chronic myelogenous leukaemia, CO clinical option (can be carried after careful assessment of risks and benefits), CR1, 2 first, second complete remission, D developmental (further trials are needed), GNR generally not recommended, HL Hodgkin lymphoma, HSCT haematopoietic stem cell transplantation, IBMFS inborn marrow failure syndromes (Fanconi anaemia, dyskeratosis congenita, Blackfan–Diamond anaemia and others), ID immunodeficiency, JMML juvenile myelomonocytic leukaemia, MDS myelodysplastic syndromes, MLD metachromatic leukodystrophy, MMAD mismatched alternative donors (cord blood, haploidentical and mismatched unrelated donors), MPS mucopolysaccharidosis, MSD matched sibling donor, MUD well-matched unrelated donor (8/8, 10/10, or 9/10 if mismatched is in DQB1), PSD peroxisomal storage diseases, S standard of care (generally indicated in suitable patients), SAA severe aplastic anaemia, SCD sickle cell disease (high risk), SCID severe combined immunodeficiencies, X-ALD X-linked adrenoleukodystrophy.
aCategories are based on number of white blood cells, cytogenetics and molecular markers at diagnosis and time to achieve remission (see text).
bFor Wolman disease, MPSII and VII, decision is individualised after expert evaluation.