1. Hematopoietic stem cell transplantation in children with Griscelli syndrome type 2: a single-center report on 35 patients.
- Author
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Al-Mofareh M, Ayas M, Al-Seraihy A, Siddiqui K, Al-Jefri A, Ghemlas I, Alsaedi H, El-Solh H, Al-Sweedan S, Al-Saud B, Al-Mousa H, Al-Dhekri H, Arnaout R, Mohammed R, Al-Muhsen S, and Al-Ahmari A
- Subjects
- Busulfan, Child, Humans, Neoplasm Recurrence, Local, Retrospective Studies, Transplantation Conditioning, Vidarabine, Graft vs Host Disease, Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation, Lymphohistiocytosis, Hemophagocytic therapy, Piebaldism therapy, Primary Immunodeficiency Diseases therapy
- Abstract
In 2010, we reported the outcome of hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT) in 11 children with Griscelli syndrome type 2 (GS2). We report here the update on this cohort to include 35 patients. Twenty-seven (77%) patients received conditioning regimen including busulfan, cyclophosphamide with etoposide. Eight (23%) were given busulfan, fludarabine. Thiotepa was added to busulfan and fludarabine regimen in two patients; one received haploidentical marrow and one unrelated cord blood. Posttransplant clinical events included veno-occlusive disease (n = 7), acute (n = 8), or chronic (n = 1) graft-versus-host disease II-IV. With a mortality rate of 37.1% (n = 13) and a median follow-up of 87.7 months of the survivors, 5-year cumulative probability of overall survival (OS) for our cohort of patients was 62.7% (±8.2%). Cumulative probability of 5-year OS was significantly better in those who did not have hemophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis (HLH) prior to HSCT (100% vs. 53.3 ± 9.5%, P value: 0.042). Of the 16 patients with neurologic involvement before HSCT, 8 survived and 3 presented sequelae. OS at 5-year was 50 ± 12.5% and 73.3 ± 10.2% (P value: 0.320) in patients with and without CNS involvement, respectively. In conclusion, HSCT in patients with GS2 is potentially curative with long-term disease-free survival. Early HSCT before the development of the accelerated phase is associated with a better outcome.
- Published
- 2020
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