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The minimum required level of donor chimerism in hereditary hemophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis.

Authors :
Hartz, Bernd
Marsh, Rebecca
Kanchan Rao
Henter, Jan-Inge
Jordan, Michael
Filipovich, Lisa
Bader, Peter
Beier, Rita
Burkhardt, Birgit
Meisel, Roland
Schulz, Ansgar
Winkler, Beate
Albert, Michael H.
Greil, Johann
Karasu, Gülsün
Woessmann, Wilhelm
Corbacioglu, Selim
Gruhn, Bernd
Holter, Wolfgang
Kühl, Jörn-Sven
Source :
Blood. 6/23/2016, Vol. 127 Issue 25, p3281-3290. 10p.
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

Reduced-intensity conditioning has improved survival after hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT) for hemophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis (HLH) at the cost of more frequent mixed chimerism. The minimum level of donor chimerism (DC) required to prevent HLH reactivation in humans remains to be determined. In a multicenter retrospective study, 103 patients transplanted for hereditary HLH (2000-2013) and DC permanently or transiently <75% (overall, CD31, CD561) were analyzed regarding DC, specific immunologic function, occurrence of systemic reactivations (≥5/8 HLH criteria), partial systemic flares (<5 criteria and HLH-directed treatment), isolated central nervous system reactivations, and management. Recurrence was reported in 18 patients (systemic reactivation n = 11, partial flare n=3, isolated central nervous system reactivation n=4). Ten events occurred during profound immune suppression before day 180 (median DC, 10%; range, 1-100%; CD31 if available, otherwise overall DC), which renders a differentiation between secondary post-HSCT HLH and HLH related to the genetic defect difficult. Eight events occurred between 0.5 and 6.7 years post-HSCT (median DC, 13%; range, 0-30%). In=patients, overall and lineage-specific DC were ≤10% for >6 months (median, 5.1; range, 1.1-10 years) without reactivation. A second HSCT was performed in 18 patients (median, DC 4%; range, 0-19%). Death from reactivation occurred in 4 patients (22% of recurrences). Six patients died of transplant complications following a second HSCT(33% of second HSCT).We conclude that a DC>20%-30% is protective against late reactivation. Lower levels do not, however, inescapably result in recurrences. The decision for or against second HSCT must be based on a thorough risk assessment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00064971
Volume :
127
Issue :
25
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Blood
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
116364044
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1182/blood-2015-12-684498