Browsing by Author "Eapen, Mary"
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Item Open Access Allele-level HLA matching for umbilical cord blood transplantation for non-malignant diseases in children: a retrospective analysis.(The Lancet. Haematology, 2017-07) Eapen, Mary; Wang, Tao; Veys, Paul A; Boelens, Jaap J; St Martin, Andrew; Spellman, Stephen; Bonfim, Carmem Sales; Brady, Colleen; Cant, Andrew J; Dalle, Jean-Hugues; Davies, Stella M; Freeman, John; Hsu, Katherine C; Fleischhauer, Katharina; Kenzey, Chantal; Kurtzberg, Joanne; Michel, Gerard; Orchard, Paul J; Paviglianiti, Annalisa; Rocha, Vanderson; Veneris, Michael R; Volt, Fernanda; Wynn, Robert; Lee, Stephanie J; Horowitz, Mary M; Gluckman, Eliane; Ruggeri, AnnalisaBackground
The standard for selecting unrelated umbilical cord blood units for transplantation for non-malignant diseases relies on antigen-level (lower resolution) HLA typing for HLA-A and HLA-B, and allele-level for HLA-DRB1. We aimed to study the effects of allele-level matching at a higher resolution-HLA-A, HLA-B, HLA-C, and HLA-DRB1, which is the standard used for adult unrelated volunteer donor transplantation for non-malignant diseases-for umbilical cord blood transplantation.Methods
We retrospectively studied 1199 paediatric donor-recipient pairs with allele-level HLA matching who received a single unit umbilical cord blood transplantation for non-malignant diseases reported to the Center for International Blood and Marrow Transplant Research or Eurocord and European Group for Blood and Marrow Transplant. Transplantations occurred between Jan 1, 2000, and Dec 31, 2012. The primary outcome was overall survival. The effect of HLA matching on survival was studied using a Cox regression model.Findings
Compared with HLA-matched transplantations, mortality was higher with transplantations mismatched at two (hazard ratio [HR] 1·55, 95% CI 1·08-2·21, p=0·018), three (2·04, 1·44-2·89, p=0·0001), and four or more alleles (3·15, 2·16-4·58, p<0·0001). There were no significant differences in mortality between transplantations that were matched and mismatched at one allele (HR 1·18, 95% CI 0·80-1·72, p=0·39). Other factors associated with higher mortality included recipient cytomegalovirus seropositivity (HR 1·40, 95% CI 1·13-1·74, p=0·0020), reduced intensity compared with myeloablative conditioning regimens (HR 1·36, 1·10-1·68, p=0·0041), transplantation of units with total nucleated cell dose of more than 21 × 107 cells per kg compared with 21 × 107 cells per kg or less (HR 1·47, 1·11-1·95, p=0·0076), and transplantations done in 2000-05 compared with those done in 2006-12 (HR 1·64, 1·31-2·04, p<0·0001). The 5-year overall survival adjusted for recipient cytomegalovirus serostatus, conditioning regimen intensity, total nucleated cell dose, and transplantation period was 79% (95% CI 74-85) after HLA matched, 76% (71-81) after one allele mismatched, 70% (65-75) after two alleles mismatched, 62% (57-68) after three alleles mismatched, and 49% (41-57) after four or more alleles mismatched transplantations. Graft failure was the predominant cause of mortality.Interpretation
These data support a change from current practice in that selection of unrelated umbilical cord blood units for transplantation for non-malignant diseases should consider allele-level HLA matching at HLA-A, HLA-B, HLA-C, and HLA-DRB1.Funding
National Cancer Institute; National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute; National Institute for Allergy and Infectious Diseases; US Department of Health and Human Services-Health Resources and Services Administration; and US Department of Navy.Item Open Access Analysis of risk factors influencing outcomes after cord blood transplantation in children with juvenile myelomonocytic leukemia: a EUROCORD, EBMT, EWOG-MDS, CIBMTR study.(Blood, 2013-09) Locatelli, Franco; Crotta, Alessandro; Ruggeri, Annalisa; Eapen, Mary; Wagner, John E; Macmillan, Margaret L; Zecca, Marco; Kurtzberg, Joanne; Bonfim, Carmem; Vora, Ajay; Díaz de Heredia, Cristina; Teague, Lochie; Stein, Jerry; O'Brien, Tracey A; Bittencourt, Henrique; Madureira, Adrienne; Strahm, Brigitte; Peters, Christina; Niemeyer, Charlotte; Gluckman, Eliane; Rocha, VandersonWe retrospectively analyzed 110 patients with juvenile myelomonocytic leukemia, given single-unit, unrelated donor umbilical cord blood transplantation. Median age at diagnosis and at transplantation was 1.4 years (age range, 0.1-6.4 years) and 2.2 years (age range, 0.5-7.4 years), respectively. Before transplantation, 88 patients received chemotherapy; splenectomy was performed in 24 patients. Monosomy of chromosome 7 was the most frequent cytogenetic abnormality, found in 24% of patients. All but 8 patients received myeloablative conditioning; cyclosporine plus steroids was the most common graft-versus-host disease prophylaxis. Sixteen percent of units were HLA-matched with the recipient, whereas 43% and 35% had either 1 or 2 to 3 HLA disparities, respectively. The median number of nucleated cells infused was 7.1 × 10(7)/kg (range, 1.7-27.6 × 10(7)/kg). With a median follow-up of 64 months (range, 14-174 months), the 5-year cumulative incidences of transplantation-related mortality and relapse were 22% and 33%, respectively. The 5-year disease-free survival rate was 44%. In multivariate analysis, factors predicting better disease-free survival were age younger than 1.4 years at diagnosis (hazard ratio [HR], 0.42; P = .005), 0 to 1 HLA disparities in the donor/recipient pair (HR, 0.4; P = .009), and karyotype other than monosomy 7 (HR, 0.5; P = .02). Umbilical cord blood transplantation may cure a relevant proportion of children with juvenile myelomonocytic leukemia. Because disease recurrence remains the major cause of treatment failure, strategies to reduce incidence of relapse are warranted.Item Open Access Effect of cord blood processing on transplantation outcomes after single myeloablative umbilical cord blood transplantation.(Biology of blood and marrow transplantation : journal of the American Society for Blood and Marrow Transplantation, 2015-04) Ballen, Karen K; Logan, Brent R; Laughlin, Mary J; He, Wensheng; Ambruso, Daniel R; Armitage, Susan E; Beddard, Rachel L; Bhatla, Deepika; Hwang, William YK; Kiss, Joseph E; Koegler, Gesine; Kurtzberg, Joanne; Nagler, Arnon; Oh, David; Petz, Lawrence D; Price, Thomas H; Quinones, Ralph R; Ratanatharathorn, Voravit; Rizzo, J Douglas; Sazama, Kathleen; Scaradavou, Andromachi; Schuster, Michael W; Sender, Leonard S; Shpall, Elizabeth J; Spellman, Stephen R; Sutton, Millicent; Weitekamp, Lee Ann; Wingard, John R; Eapen, MaryVariations in cord blood manufacturing and administration are common, and the optimal practice is not known. We compared processing and banking practices at 16 public cord blood banks (CBB) in the United States and assessed transplantation outcomes on 530 single umbilical cord blood (UCB) myeloablative transplantations for hematologic malignancies facilitated by these banks. UCB banking practices were separated into 3 mutually exclusive groups based on whether processing was automated or manual, units were plasma and red blood cell reduced, or buffy coat production method or plasma reduced. Compared with the automated processing system for units, the day 28 neutrophil recovery was significantly lower after transplantation of units that were manually processed and plasma reduced (red cell replete) (odds ratio, .19; P = .001) or plasma and red cell reduced (odds ratio, .54; P = .05). Day 100 survival did not differ by CBB. However, day 100 survival was better with units that were thawed with the dextran-albumin wash method compared with the "no wash" or "dilution only" techniques (odds ratio, 1.82; P = .04). In conclusion, CBB processing has no significant effect on early (day 100) survival despite differences in kinetics of neutrophil recovery.Item Open Access Effect of HLA-matching recipients to donor noninherited maternal antigens on outcomes after mismatched umbilical cord blood transplantation for hematologic malignancy.(Biology of blood and marrow transplantation : journal of the American Society for Blood and Marrow Transplantation, 2012-12) Rocha, Vanderson; Spellman, Stephen; Zhang, Mei-Jie; Ruggeri, Annalisa; Purtill, Duncan; Brady, Colleen; Baxter-Lowe, Lee Ann; Baudoux, Etienne; Bergamaschi, Paola; Chow, Robert; Freed, Brian; Koegler, Gesine; Kurtzberg, Joanne; Larghero, Jerome; Lecchi, Lucilla; Nagler, Arnon; Navarrette, Cristina; Prasad, Vinod; Pouthier, Fabienne; Price, Thomas; Ratanatharathorn, Voravit; van Rood, Jon J; Horowitz, Mary M; Gluckman, Eliane; Eapen, Mary; Eurocord-European Blood and Marrow Transplant Group and the Center for International Blood and Marrow Transplant ResearchTransplantation-related mortality (TRM) is high after HLA-mismatched umbilical cord blood (UCB) transplantation (UCBT). In utero, exposure to noninherited maternal antigen (NIMA) is recognized by the fetus, which induces T regulator cells to that haplotype. It is plausible that UCBTs in which recipients are matched to donor NIMAs may alleviate some of the excess mortality associated with this treatment. To explore this concept, we used marginal matched-pair Cox regression analysis to compare outcomes in 48 NIMA-matched UCBTs (ie, the NIMA of the donor UCB unit matched to the patient) and in 116 non-NIMA-matched UCBTs. All patients had a hematologic malignancy and received a single UCB unit. Cases and controls were matched on age, disease, disease status, transplantation-conditioning regimen, HLA match, and infused cell dose. TRM was lower after NIMA-matched UCBTs compared with NIMA-mismatched UCBTs (relative risk, 0.48; P = .05; 18% versus 32% at 5 years posttransplantation). Consequently, overall survival was higher after NIMA-matched UCBT. The 5-year probability of overall survival was 55% after NIMA-matched UCBTs versus 38% after NIMA-mismatched UCBTs (P = .04). When faced with the choice of multiple HLA-mismatched UCB units containing adequate cell doses, selecting an NIMA-matched UCB unit may improve survival after mismatched UCBT.Item Open Access Long-term survival and late deaths after hematopoietic cell transplantation for primary immunodeficiency diseases and inborn errors of metabolism.(Biology of blood and marrow transplantation : journal of the American Society for Blood and Marrow Transplantation, 2012-09) Eapen, Mary; Ahn, Kwang Woo; Orchard, Paul J; Cowan, Morton J; Davies, Stella M; Fasth, Anders; Hassebroek, Anna; Ayas, Mouhab; Bonfim, Carmem; O'Brien, Tracey A; Gross, Thomas G; Horwitz, Mitchell; Horwitz, Edwin; Kapoor, Neena; Kurtzberg, Joanne; Majhail, Navneet; Ringden, Olle; Szabolcs, Paul; Veys, Paul; Baker, K ScottIt is uncertain whether late mortality rates after hematopoietic cell transplantation for severe combined immunodeficiency (SCID), non-SCID primary immunodeficiency diseases (non-SCID PIDD), and inborn errors of metabolism (IEM) return to rates observed in the general population, matched for age, sex, and nationality. We studied patients with SCID (n = 201), non-SCID PIDD (n = 405), and IEM (n = 348) who survived for at least 2 years after transplantation with normal T cell function (SCID) or >95% donor chimerism (non-SCID PIDD and IEM). Importantly, mortality rate was significantly higher in these patients compared with the general population for several years after transplantation. The rate decreased toward the normal rate in patients with SCID and non-SCID PIDD beyond 6 years after transplantation, but not in patients with IEM. Active chronic graft-versus-host disease at 2 years was associated with increased risk of late mortality for all diseases (hazard ratio [HR], 1.87; P = .05). In addition, late mortality was higher in patients with non-SCID PIDD who received T cell-depleted grafts (HR 4.16; P = .007) and in patients with IEM who received unrelated donor grafts (HR, 2.72; P = .03) or mismatched related donor grafts (HR, 3.76; P = .01). The finding of higher mortality rates in these long-term survivors for many years after transplantation confirms the need for long-term surveillance.Item Open Access Myelodysplastic syndrome evolving from aplastic anemia treated with immunosuppressive therapy: efficacy of hematopoietic stem cell transplantation.(Haematologica, 2014-12) Kim, Sung-Yong; Le Rademacher, Jennifer; Antin, Joseph H; Anderlini, Paolo; Ayas, Mouhab; Battiwalla, Minoo; Carreras, Jeanette; Kurtzberg, Joanne; Nakamura, Ryotaro; Eapen, Mary; Deeg, H JoachimA proportion of patients with aplastic anemia who are treated with immunosuppressive therapy develop clonal hematologic disorders, including post-aplastic anemia myelodysplastic syndrome. Many will proceed to allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation. We identified 123 patients with post-aplastic anemia myelodysplastic syndrome who from 1991 through 2011 underwent allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation, and in a matched-pair analysis compared outcome to that in 393 patients with de novo myelodysplastic syndrome. There was no difference in overall survival. There were no significant differences with regard to 5-year probabilities of relapse, non-relapse mortality, relapse-free survival and overall survival; these were 14%, 40%, 46% and 49% for post-aplastic anemia myelodysplastic syndrome, and 20%, 33%, 47% and 49% for de novo myelodysplastic syndrome, respectively. In multivariate analysis, relapse (hazard ratio 0.71; P=0.18), non-relapse mortality (hazard ratio 1.28; P=0.18), relapse-free survival (hazard ratio 0.97; P=0.80) and overall survival (hazard ratio 1.02; P=0.88) of post-aplastic anemia myelodysplastic syndrome were similar to those of patients with de novo myelodysplastic syndrome. Cytogenetic risk was independently associated with overall survival in both groups. Thus, transplant success in patients with post-aplastic anemia myelodysplastic syndrome was similar to that in patients with de novo myelodysplastic syndrome, and cytogenetics was the only significant prognostic factor for post-aplastic anemia myelodysplastic syndrome patients.Item Open Access One-unit versus two-unit cord-blood transplantation for hematologic cancers.(The New England journal of medicine, 2014-10) Wagner, John E; Eapen, Mary; Carter, Shelly; Wang, Yanli; Schultz, Kirk R; Wall, Donna A; Bunin, Nancy; Delaney, Colleen; Haut, Paul; Margolis, David; Peres, Edward; Verneris, Michael R; Walters, Mark; Horowitz, Mary M; Kurtzberg, Joanne; Blood and Marrow Transplant Clinical Trials NetworkBackground
Umbilical-cord blood has been used as the source of hematopoietic stem cells in an estimated 30,000 transplants. The limited number of hematopoietic cells in a single cord-blood unit prevents its use in recipients with larger body mass and results in delayed hematopoietic recovery and higher mortality. Therefore, we hypothesized that the greater numbers of hematopoietic cells in two units of cord blood would be associated with improved outcomes after transplantation.Methods
Between December 1, 2006, and February 24, 2012, a total of 224 patients 1 to 21 years of age with hematologic cancer were randomly assigned to undergo double-unit (111 patients) or single-unit (113 patients) cord-blood transplantation after a uniform myeloablative conditioning regimen and immunoprophylaxis for graft-versus-host disease (GVHD). The primary end point was 1-year overall survival.Results
Treatment groups were matched for age, sex, self-reported race (white vs. nonwhite), performance status, degree of donor-recipient HLA matching, and disease type and status at transplantation. The 1-year overall survival rate was 65% (95% confidence interval [CI], 56 to 74) and 73% (95% CI, 63 to 80) among recipients of double and single cord-blood units, respectively (P=0.17). Similar outcomes in the two groups were also observed with respect to the rates of disease-free survival, neutrophil recovery, transplantation-related death, relapse, infections, immunologic reconstitution, and grade II-IV acute GVHD. However, improved platelet recovery and lower incidences of grade III and IV acute and extensive chronic GVHD were observed among recipients of a single cord-blood unit.Conclusions
We found that among children and adolescents with hematologic cancer, survival rates were similar after single-unit and double-unit cord-blood transplantation; however, a single-unit cord-blood transplant was associated with better platelet recovery and a lower risk of GVHD. (Funded by the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute and the National Cancer Institute; ClinicalTrials.gov number, NCT00412360.).Item Open Access One-unit versus two-unit cord-blood transplantation.(The New England journal of medicine, 2015-01) Wagner, John E; Eapen, Mary; Kurtzberg, JoanneItem Open Access Outcome of Hematopoietic Cell Transplantation for DNA-Double Strand Breakage Repair Disorders.(J Allergy Clin Immunol, 2017-04-06) Slack, James; Albert, Michael H; Balashov, Dmitry; Belohradsky, Bernd H; Bertaina, Alice; Bleesing, Jack; Booth, Claire; Buechner, Jochen; Buckley, Rebecca H; Ouachée-Chardin, Marie; Deripapa, Elena; Drabko, Katarzyna; Eapen, Mary; Feuchtinger, Tobias; Finocchi, Andrea; Gaspar, H Bobby; Ghosh, Sujal; Gillio, Alfred; Gonzalez-Granado, Luis I; Grunebaum, Eyal; Güngör, Tayfun; Heilmann, Carsten; Helminen, Merja; Higuchi, Kohei; Imai, Kohsuke; Kalwak, Krzysztof; Kanazawa, Nubuo; Karasu, Gülsün; Kucuk, Zeynep Y; Laberko, Alexandra; Lange, Andrzej; Mahlaoui, Nizar; Meisel, Roland; Moshous, D; Muramatsu, Hideki; Parikh, Suhag; Pasic, Srdjan; Schmid, Irene; Schuetz, Catharina; Schulz, Ansgar; Schultz, Kirk R; Shaw, Peter J; Slatter, Mary A; Sykora, Karl-Walter; Tamura, Shinobu; Taskinen, Mervi; Wawer, Angela; Wolska-Kuśnierz, Beata; Cowan, Morton J; Fischer, Alain; Gennery, Andrew R; Inborn Errors Working Party of the European Society for Blood and Marrow Transplantation and the European Society for Immunodeficiencies; Stem Cell Transplant for Immunodeficiencies in Europe (SCETIDE); Center for International Blood and Marrow Transplant Research; Primary Immunodeficiency Treatment ConsortiumBACKGROUND: Rare DNA breakage-repair disorders predispose to infection and lympho-reticular malignancies. Hematopoietic cell transplantation (HCT) is curative but co-administered chemo- or radio-therapy is damaging due to systemic radio-sensitivity. We collected HCT outcome data for Nijmegen Breakage syndrome (NBS), DNA ligase IV deficiency (LIG4), Cernunnos-XLF deficiency and ataxia-telangiectasia. METHODS: Data from 38 centres worldwide, including indication, donor, conditioning regimen, graft-versus-host disease (GvHD) and outcome were analyzed. Conditioning was classified as myeloablative (MAC) if it contained radiotherapy or alkylators and reduced intensity (RIC) if no alkylators and/or fludarabine ≤150 mg/m(2) and cyclophosphamide ≤ 40 mg/kg were used. RESULTS: 55 new, 14 updated and 18 previously published patients were analyzed. Median age at HCT was 48 (range 1.5 - 552) months. 29 were transplanted for infection, 21 malignancy, 13 bone marrow failure, 13 pre-emptively, 5 had multiple indications, and 6 had no information. 22 received MAC, 59 RIC, 4 were infused;- information unavailable for 2. 73/77 patients with LIG4, Cernunnos-XLF deficiency or NBS received conditioning. Survival was 53/77 (69%), worse for MAC than RIC (p=0.006). Most deaths occurred early post-transplant suggesting poor tolerance of conditioning. Survival in ataxia-telangiectasia patients was 25%. 41/83 patients experienced aGvHD (49%): less in RIC compared to MAC, 26/56 (46%) vs 12/21 (57%) (p=0.45). Median follow-up was 35 (range 2-168) months. No secondary malignancies were reported during 15 years follow-up. Growth and developmental delay remained post-HCT; immune-mediated complications resolved. CONCLUSION: RIC-HCT resolves DNA repair disorder-associated immunodeficiency. Long-term follow-up is required for secondary malignancy surveillance. Routine HCT for ataxia-telangiectasia is not recommended.Item Open Access Outcome of transplantation for acute lymphoblastic leukemia in children with Down syndrome.(Pediatric blood & cancer, 2014-06) Hitzler, Johann K; He, Wensheng; Doyle, John; Cairo, Mitchell; Camitta, Bruce M; Chan, Ka Wah; Diaz Perez, Miguel A; Fraser, Christopher; Gross, Thomas G; Horan, John T; Kennedy-Nasser, Alana A; Kitko, Carrie; Kurtzberg, Joanne; Lehmann, Leslie; O'Brien, Tracey; Pulsipher, Michael A; Smith, Franklin O; Zhang, Mei-Jie; Eapen, Mary; Carpenter, Paul A; CIBMTR Pediatric Cancer Working CommitteeWe report on 27 patients with Down syndrome (DS) and acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) who received allogeneic hematopoietic cell transplantation (HCT) between 2000 and 2009. Seventy-eight percent of patients received myeloablative conditioning and 52% underwent transplantation in second remission. Disease-free survival (DFS) was 24% at a median of 3 years. Post-transplant leukemic relapse was more frequent than expected for children with DS-ALL (54%) than for non-DS ALL. These data suggest leukemic relapse rather than transplant toxicity is the most important cause of treatment failure. Advancements in leukemia control are especially needed for improvement in HCT outcomes for DS-ALL.Item Open Access Outcome of transplantation for acute myelogenous leukemia in children with Down syndrome.(Biology of blood and marrow transplantation : journal of the American Society for Blood and Marrow Transplantation, 2013-06) Hitzler, Johann K; He, Wensheng; Doyle, John; Cairo, Mitchell; Camitta, Bruce M; Chan, Ka Wah; Diaz Perez, Miguel A; Fraser, Christopher; Gross, Thomas G; Horan, John T; Kennedy-Nasser, Alana A; Kitko, Carrie; Kurtzberg, Joanne; Lehmann, Leslie; O'Brien, Tracey; Pulsipher, Michael A; Smith, Franklin O; Zhang, Mei-Jie; Eapen, Mary; Carpenter, Paul A; CIBMTR Pediatric Cancer Working CommitteeData on outcomes of allogeneic transplantation in children with Down syndrome and acute myelogenous leukemia (DS-AML) are scarce and conflicting. Early reports stress treatment-related mortality as the main barrier; a recent case series points to posttransplantation relapse. We reviewed outcome data for 28 patients with DS-AML reported to the Center for International Blood and Marrow Transplant Research between 2000 and 2009 and performed a first matched-pair analysis of 21 patients with DS-AML and 80 non-DS AML controls. The median age at transplantation for DS-AML was 3 years, and almost half of the cohort was in second remission. The 3-year probability of overall survival was only 19%. In multivariate analysis, adjusting for interval from diagnosis to transplantation, risks of relapse (hazard ratio [HR], 2.84; P < .001; 62% versus 37%) and transplant-related mortality (HR, 2.52; P = .04; 24% versus 15%) were significantly higher for DS-AML compared to non-DS AML. Overall mortality risk (HR, 2.86; P < .001; 21% versus 52%) was significantly higher for DS-AML. Both transplant-related mortality and relapse contribute to higher mortality. Excess mortality in DS-AML patients can only effectively be addressed through an international multicenter effort to pilot strategies aimed at lowering both transplant-related mortality and relapse risks.Item Open Access Outcomes after hematopoietic stem cell transplantation for children with I-cell disease.(Biology of blood and marrow transplantation : journal of the American Society for Blood and Marrow Transplantation, 2014-11) Lund, Troy C; Cathey, Sara S; Miller, Weston P; Eapen, Mary; Andreansky, Martin; Dvorak, Christopher C; Davis, Jeffrey H; Dalal, Jignesh D; Devine, Steven M; Eames, Gretchen M; Ferguson, William S; Giller, Roger H; He, Wensheng; Kurtzberg, Joanne; Krance, Robert; Katsanis, Emmanuel; Lewis, Victor A; Sahdev, Indira; Orchard, Paul JMucolipidosis type II (MLII), or I-cell disease, is a rare but severe disorder affecting localization of enzymes to the lysosome, generally resulting in death before the 10th birthday. Although hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT) has been used to successfully treat some lysosomal storage diseases, only 2 cases have been reported on the use of HSCT to treat MLII. For the first time, we describe the combined international experience in the use of HSCT for MLII in 22 patients. Although 95% of the patients engrafted, overall survival was low, with only 6 patients (27%) alive at last follow-up. The most common cause of death post-transplant was cardiovascular complications, most likely due to disease progression. Survivors were globally delayed in development and often required complex medical support, such as gastrostomy tubes for nutrition and tracheostomy with mechanical ventilation. Although HSCT has demonstrated efficacy in treating some lysosomal storage disorders, the neurologic outcome and survival for patents with MLII were poor. Therefore, new medical and cellular therapies should be sought for these patients.Item Open Access Outcomes of allogeneic hematopoietic cell transplantation in patients with dyskeratosis congenita.(Biology of blood and marrow transplantation : journal of the American Society for Blood and Marrow Transplantation, 2013-08) Gadalla, Shahinaz M; Sales-Bonfim, Carmem; Carreras, Jeanette; Alter, Blanche P; Antin, Joseph H; Ayas, Mouhab; Bodhi, Prasad; Davis, Jeffrey; Davies, Stella M; Deconinck, Eric; Deeg, H Joachim; Duerst, Reggie E; Fasth, Anders; Ghavamzadeh, Ardeshir; Giri, Neelam; Goldman, Frederick D; Kolb, E Anders; Krance, Robert; Kurtzberg, Joanne; Leung, Wing H; Srivastava, Alok; Or, Reuven; Richman, Carol M; Rosenberg, Philip S; Toledo Codina, Jose Sanchez de; Shenoy, Shalini; Socié, Gerard; Tolar, Jakub; Williams, Kirsten M; Eapen, Mary; Savage, Sharon AWe describe outcomes after allogeneic transplantation in 34 patients with dyskeratosis congenita who underwent transplantation between 1981 and 2009. The median age at transplantation was 13 years (range, 2 to 35). Approximately 50% of transplantations were from related donors. Bone marrow was the predominant source of stem cells (24 of 34). The day-28 probability of neutrophil recovery was 73% and the day-100 platelet recovery was 72%. The day-100 probability of grade II to IV acute GVHD and the 3-year probability of chronic graft-versus-host disease were 24% and 37%, respectively. The 10-year probability of survival was 30%; 14 patients were alive at last follow-up. Ten deaths occurred within 4 months from transplantation because of graft failure (n = 6) or other transplantation-related complications; 9 of these patients had undergone transplantation from mismatched related or from unrelated donors. Another 10 deaths occurred after 4 months; 6 of them occurred more than 5 years after transplantation, and 4 of these were attributed to pulmonary failure. Transplantation regimen intensity and transplantations from mismatched related or unrelated donors were associated with early mortality. Transplantation of grafts from HLA-matched siblings with cyclophosphamide-containing nonradiation regimens was associated with early low toxicity. Late mortality was attributed mainly to pulmonary complications and likely related to the underlying disease.Item Open Access Outcomes of transplantation using various hematopoietic cell sources in children with Hurler syndrome after myeloablative conditioning.(Blood, 2013-05) Boelens, Jaap Jan; Aldenhoven, Mieke; Purtill, Duncan; Ruggeri, Annalisa; Defor, Todd; Wynn, Robert; Wraith, Ed; Cavazzana-Calvo, Marina; Rovelli, Attilio; Fischer, Alain; Tolar, Jakub; Prasad, Vinod K; Escolar, Maria; Gluckman, Eliane; O'Meara, Anne; Orchard, Paul J; Veys, Paul; Eapen, Mary; Kurtzberg, Joanne; Rocha, Vanderson; Eurocord; Inborn Errors Working Party of European Blood and Marrow Transplant group; Duke University Blood and Marrow Transplantation Program; Centre for International Blood and Marrow ResearchWe report transplantation outcomes of 258 children with Hurler syndrome (HS) after a myeloablative conditioning regimen from 1995 to 2007. Median age at transplant was 16.7 months and median follow-up was 57 months. The cumulative incidence of neutrophil recovery at day 60 was 91%, acute graft-versus-host disease (GVHD) (grade II-IV) at day 100 was 25%, and chronic GVHD and 5 years was 16%. Overall survival and event-free survival (EFS) at 5 years were 74% and 63%, respectively. EFS after HLA-matched sibling donor (MSD) and 6/6 matched unrelated cord blood (CB) donor were similar at 81%, 66% after 10/10 HLA-matched unrelated donor (UD), and 68% after 5/6 matched CB donor. EFS was lower after transplantation in 4/6 matched unrelated CB (UCB) (57%; P = .031) and HLA-mismatched UD (41%; P = .007). Full-donor chimerism (P = .039) and normal enzyme levels (P = .007) were higher after CB transplantation (92% and 98%, respectively) compared with the other grafts sources (69% and 59%, respectively). In conclusion, results of allogeneic transplantation for HS are encouraging, with similar EFS rates after MSD, 6/6 matched UCB, 5/6 UCB, and 10/10 matched UD. The use of mismatched UD and 4/6 matched UCB was associated with lower EFS.Item Open Access Sickle cell disease: an international survey of results of HLA-identical sibling hematopoietic stem cell transplantation.(Blood, 2017-03) Gluckman, Eliane; Cappelli, Barbara; Bernaudin, Francoise; Labopin, Myriam; Volt, Fernanda; Carreras, Jeanette; Pinto Simões, Belinda; Ferster, Alina; Dupont, Sophie; de la Fuente, Josu; Dalle, Jean-Hugues; Zecca, Marco; Walters, Mark C; Krishnamurti, Lakshmanan; Bhatia, Monica; Leung, Kathryn; Yanik, Gregory; Kurtzberg, Joanne; Dhedin, Nathalie; Kuentz, Mathieu; Michel, Gerard; Apperley, Jane; Lutz, Patrick; Neven, Bénédicte; Bertrand, Yves; Vannier, Jean Pierre; Ayas, Mouhab; Cavazzana, Marina; Matthes-Martin, Susanne; Rocha, Vanderson; Elayoubi, Hanadi; Kenzey, Chantal; Bader, Peter; Locatelli, Franco; Ruggeri, Annalisa; Eapen, Mary; Eurocord, the Pediatric Working Party of the European Society for Blood and Marrow Transplantation, and the Center for International Blood and Marrow Transplant ResearchDespite advances in supportive therapy to prevent complications of sickle cell disease (SCD), access to care is not universal. Hematopoietic cell transplantation is, to date, the only curative therapy for SCD, but its application is limited by availability of a suitable HLA-matched donor and lack of awareness of the benefits of transplant. Included in this study are 1000 recipients of HLA-identical sibling transplants performed between 1986 and 2013 and reported to the European Society for Blood and Marrow Transplantation, Eurocord, and the Center for International Blood and Marrow Transplant Research. The primary endpoint was event-free survival, defined as being alive without graft failure; risk factors were studied using a Cox regression models. The median age at transplantation was 9 years, and the median follow-up was longer than 5 years. Most patients received a myeloablative conditioning regimen (n = 873; 87%); the remainder received reduced-intensity conditioning regimens (n = 125; 13%). Bone marrow was the predominant stem cell source (n = 839; 84%); peripheral blood and cord blood progenitors were used in 73 (7%) and 88 (9%) patients, respectively. The 5-year event-free survival and overall survival were 91.4% (95% confidence interval, 89.6%-93.3%) and 92.9% (95% confidence interval, 91.1%-94.6%), respectively. Event-free survival was lower with increasing age at transplantation (hazard ratio [HR], 1.09; P < .001) and higher for transplantations performed after 2006 (HR, 0.95; P = .013). Twenty-three patients experienced graft failure, and 70 patients (7%) died, with the most common cause of death being infection. The excellent outcome of a cohort transplanted over the course of 3 decades confirms the role of HLA-identical sibling transplantation for children and adults with SCD.Item Open Access Umbilical cord blood transplantation for children with thalassemia and sickle cell disease.(Biology of blood and marrow transplantation : journal of the American Society for Blood and Marrow Transplantation, 2011-09) Ruggeri, Annalisa; Eapen, Mary; Scaravadou, Andromachi; Cairo, Mitchell S; Bhatia, Monica; Kurtzberg, Joanne; Wingard, John R; Fasth, Anders; Lo Nigro, Luca; Ayas, Mouhab; Purtill, Duncan; Boudjedir, Karim; Chaves, Wagnara; Walters, Mark C; Wagner, John; Gluckman, Eliane; Rocha, Vanderson; Eurocord Registry; Center for International Blood and Marrow Transplant Research; New York Blood CenterWe examined the efficacy of unrelated cord blood (CB) transplantation in children with thalassemia (n = 35) and sickle cell disease (n = 16), using data reported to 3 registries. Donor-recipient pairs were matched at HLA-A and -B (antigen level) and DRB1 (allele level) in 7 or HLA mismatched at 1 (n = 18), 2 (n = 25), or 3 loci (n = 1). Transplant conditioning was myeloablative (n = 39) or reduced intensity (n = 12). Neutrophil recovery with donor chimerism was documented in 24 patients; 11 patients developed grade II-IV acute graft-versus-host disease (aGVHD) and 10 patients, chronic GVHD (cGVHD). Overall survival (OS) and disease-free survival (DFS) were 62% and 21% for thalassemia and 94% and 50% for sickle cell disease (SCD), respectively. In multivariate analysis, engraftment rate (hazard ratio [HR] 2.2, P = .05) and DFS (HR 0.4, P = .01) were higher with cell dose >5 × 10(7)/kg. The 2-year probability of DFS was 45% in patients who received grafts with cell dose >5 × 10(7)/kg and 13% with lower cell dose. Primary graft failure was the predominant cause of treatment failure occurring in 20 patients with thalassemia and 7 patients with SCD. Primary graft failure was fatal in 5 patients with thalassemia. These results suggest that only CB units containing an expected infused cell dose >5 × 10(7)/kg should be considered for transplantation for hemoglobinopathy.Item Open Access Umbilical Cord Blood Transplantation in Children with Acute Leukemia: Impact of Conditioning on Transplantation Outcomes.(Biology of blood and marrow transplantation : journal of the American Society for Blood and Marrow Transplantation, 2017-10) Eapen, Mary; Kurtzberg, Joanne; Zhang, Mei-Jie; Hattersely, Gareth; Fei, Mingwei; Mendizabal, Adam; Chan, Ka Wah; De Oliveira, Satiro; Schultz, Kirk R; Wall, Donna; Horowitz, Mary M; Wagner, John EThe Blood and Marrow Transplant Clinical Trials Network (BMT CTN 0501) randomized children with hematologic malignancies to transplantation with 1 or 2 cord blood units (UCB) between 2006 and 2012. While the trial concluded that survival was similar regardless of number of units infused, survival was better than previously reported. This prompted a comparison of survival of trial versus nontrial patients to determine the generalizability of trial results and whether survival was better because of the trial treatment regimen. During the trial period, 396 recipients of a single UCB unit met trial eligibility but were not enrolled. Trial patients (n = 100) received total body irradiation (TBI) 1320 cGy, cyclophosphamide 120 mg/kg, and fludarabine 75 mg/m2 (TCF). Nontrial patients either received the same regimen (n = 62; nontrial TCF) or alternative regimens (n = 334; nontrial regimens). Five-year survival between trial and nontrial patients conditioned with TCF was similar (70% versus 62%). However, 5-year survival was significantly lower with nontrial TBI-containing (47%; hazard ratio [HR], 1.97; P = .001) and chemotherapy-only regimens (49%; HR, 1.87; P = .007). The results of BMT CTN 0501 appear generalizable to the population of trial-eligible patients. The survival difference between the trial-specified regimen and other regimens indicate the importance of conditioning regimen for UCB transplantation.