Outcome of Children with Acute Leukemia Given Allogeneic HSCT Either from an Unrelated Donor or from an HLA-Partially Matched Relative after αβ-T Cell/B-Cell Depletion: A Multicenter, Retrospective, Comparative Analysis of the AIEOP Network

2017 
Abstract IntroductionFor patients in need of an allograft and lacking an HLA-identical sibling, hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT) from an unrelated donor (UD) is the standard of care. In the recent few years, αβ T-cell and B-cell depleted HLA-haploidentical HSCT (αβhaplo-HSCT) is becoming a widely employed alternative to UD-HSCT in patients with acute leukemia. We, thus, decided to conduct a retrospective analysis on the outcome of patients given either αβhaplo-HSCT or UD HSCT in the same time period, namely October 2010-December 2015, in one of the 13 centers affiliated with the Italian-HSCT pediatric network. Methods: Included in the study were 97 αβhaplo-HSCT recipients and 244 patients receiving UD-HSCT in the same period. Six centers performed both αβhaplo-HSCT and UD-HSCT, while only this latter procedure was performed in the remaining 7 centers. All children were transplanted in morphological complete remission (CR) after a fully myeloablative conditioning regimen. The UD was selected using high-resolution typing for the HLA-loci A, B, C, DRB1. The UD was 8/8 HLA-matched with the recipient in 52% of cases, while the remaining 48% of patients were transplanted from a donor with either 1 or 2 HLA-disparities. Details on patient characteristics of the 2 groups are shown in the Table; recipients of αβhaplo-HSCT were transplanted in more advanced phase and received more frequently a TBI-based regimen than UD-HSCT patients. Patients given αβhaplo-HSCT did not receive any post-transplantation pharmacological prophylaxis of graft-versus-host disease (GvHD), while the combination of anti-T lymphocyte globulin (ATLG), cyclosporine-A and short-term methotrexate was employed for preventing GvHD occurrence in all UD-HSCT recipients. ATLG was also infused before transplantation in all children treated with αβhaplo-HSCT to prevent both graft rejection and GvHD. Results: Two (2%) and 4 (2%) patients experienced graft failure in the αβhaplo-HSCT and UD-HSCT groups, respectively. Median time to neutrophil and platelet recovery was shorter in children given αβhaplo-HSCT (13 and 11 days vs. 19 and 23 days, respectively, P Conclusions: Patients givenαβhaplo-HSCT had a faster ANC/PLT recovery and a lower probability of acute GvHD in comparison to children transplanted from an UD donor. Moreover, they also had a lower risk of NRM and better probability of GRFS in comparison to patients transplanted from an UD with 1 or 2 HLA-disparities. αβhaplo-HSCT is associated with a CI of disease recurrence comparable to that of children transplanted from an UD. Altogether, these data indicate that αβhaplo-HSCT is a competitive alternative to UD-HSCT, especially in the absence of a fully-matched donor. Download : Download high-res image (137KB) Download : Download full-size image Table 1 . Disclosures No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    0
    References
    1
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []