Browsing by Subject "Hematopoietic stem cell transplantation"
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Item 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 Plerixafor (a CXCR4 antagonist) following myeloablative allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation enhances hematopoietic recovery.(J Hematol Oncol, 2018-03-04) Green, Michael MB; Chao, Nelson; Chhabra, Saurabh; Corbet, Kelly; Gasparetto, Cristina; Horwitz, Ari; Li, Zhiguo; Venkata, Jagadish Kummetha; Long, Gwynn; Mims, Alice; Rizzieri, David; Sarantopoulos, Stefanie; Stuart, Robert; Sung, Anthony D; Sullivan, Keith M; Costa, Luciano; Horwitz, Mitchell; Kang, YubinBACKGROUND: The binding of CXCR4 with its ligand (stromal-derived factor-1) maintains hematopoietic stem/progenitor cells (HSPCs) in a quiescent state. We hypothesized that blocking CXCR4/SDF-1 interaction after hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT) promotes hematopoiesis by inducing HSC proliferation. METHODS: We conducted a phase I/II trial of plerixafor on hematopoietic cell recovery following myeloablative allogeneic HSCT. Patients with hematologic malignancies receiving myeloablative conditioning were enrolled. Plerixafor 240 μg/kg was administered subcutaneously every other day beginning day +2 until day +21 or until neutrophil recovery. The primary efficacy endpoints of the study were time to absolute neutrophil count >500/μl and platelet count >20,000/μl. The cumulative incidence of neutrophil and platelet engraftment of the study cohort was compared to that of a cohort of 95 allogeneic peripheral blood stem cell transplant recipients treated during the same period of time and who received similar conditioning and graft-versus-host disease prophylaxis. RESULTS: Thirty patients received plerixafor following peripheral blood stem cell (n = 28) (PBSC) or bone marrow (n = 2) transplantation. Adverse events attributable to plerixafor were mild and indistinguishable from effects of conditioning. The kinetics of neutrophil and platelet engraftment, as demonstrated by cumulative incidence, from the 28 study subjects receiving PBSC showed faster neutrophil (p = 0.04) and platelet recovery >20 K (p = 0.04) compared to the controls. CONCLUSIONS: Our study demonstrated that plerixafor can be given safely following myeloablative HSCT. It provides proof of principle that blocking CXCR4 after HSCT enhances hematopoietic recovery. Larger, confirmatory studies in other settings are warranted. TRIAL REGISTRATION: ClinicalTrials.gov NCT01280955.Item Open Access Utility of Autopsy among Pediatric Allogeneic Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplant Recipients: One Last Chance to Learn?(Biology of blood and marrow transplantation : journal of the American Society for Blood and Marrow Transplantation, 2018-06-09) Kelly, Matthew S; Spees, Lisa; Vinesett, Richard; Stokhuyzen, Andre; McGill, Lauren; Proia, Alan D; Jenkins, Kirsten; Arshad, Mehreen; Seed, Patrick C; Martin, Paul LAutopsy may confirm clinical diagnoses or identify conditions that were not suspected prior to a patient's death. Previous studies evaluating the utility of autopsy in hematopoietic stem cell transplant (HSCT) recipients yielded conflicting results.We conducted a retrospective cohort study of children (<18 years of age) undergoing allogeneic HSCT at Duke University who died of any cause between January 1, 1995 and December 31, 2016. We evaluated associations between patient characteristics and autopsy performance using Chi-square or Fisher's exact tests. We reviewed autopsy reports to determine the concordance between pre-autopsy causes of death and pathological diagnoses identified on autopsy. We classified unexpected diagnoses on autopsy using criteria developed by Goldman et al. We evaluated for temporal changes in the autopsy consent rate and the frequency of unexpected diagnoses on autopsy using Cochran-Armitage tests.During the 22-year study period, 475 patients died and had data available on autopsy performance, and 130 (27%) of these patients underwent autopsy. The autopsy consent rate declined over time (P<0.0001), with autopsies being performed for 40% of deaths in 1995-1999 and 17% of deaths in 2009-2016. White patients were more likely to undergo autopsy than non-white patients (P=0.03). There were no associations between autopsy performance and patient age, sex, HSCT indication, or HSCT donor. Unexpected diagnoses were identified in 31 (24%) autopsies. The proportion of autopsies with an unexpected diagnosis did not change during the study period (P=0.45). However, infectious diagnoses that would have led to a change in management were more frequently identified on autopsies in 1995-2003 than in 2004-2016 (20% vs. 0%; P=0.001).The autopsy consent rate for pediatric HSCT recipients at our institution declined substantially over the past several decades. The utility of autopsy in this patient population remains high despite a reduction in the identification of unexpected infections.