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Increased Relapse Risk of Acute Lymphoid Leukemia in Homozygous HLA-C1 Patients after HLA-Matched Allogeneic Transplantation: A Japanese National Registry Study.

Authors :
Arima, Nobuyoshi
Kanda, Junya
Yabe, Toshio
Morishima, Yasuo
Tanaka, Junji
Kako, Shinichi
Sakaguchi, Hirotoshi
Kato, Motohiro
Ohashi, Kazuteru
Ozawa, Yukiyasu
Fukuda, Takahiro
Ota, Shuichi
Tachibana, Takayoshi
Onizuka, Makoto
Ichinohe, Tatsuo
Atsuta, Yoshiko
Kanda, Yoshinobu
Source :
Biology of Blood & Marrow Transplantation. Mar2020, Vol. 26 Issue 3, p431-437. 7p.
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

• Absence of KIR2DL1 ligands increases relapse in HLA-matched hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT) for acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL). • This trend is prominent in patients with Ph-negative ALL who experienced acute graft-versus-host disease. • The trend is the opposite of that in our previous report analyzing HSCT for acute myeloid leukemia/chronic myeloid leukemia. Natural killer (NK) cells expressing killer cell immunoglobulin-like receptors (KIRs) can recognize specific HLA class I molecules as their ligands. By studying a large Japanese transplant registry, we compared transplant outcomes between patients heterozygous for HLA-CAsn80/CLys80 (HLA-C1/C2) and those homozygous for HLA-C1 (HLA-C1/C1) among patients who had undergone HLA-matched hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT). A high frequency of KIR2DL1 with strong HLA-C2 binding capacity and a low frequency of HLA-C2 and KIR haplotype B are characteristic of the Japanese population. In our previous report, HLA-C1/C1 patients with myeloid leukemia were less likely to relapse than HLA-C1/C2 patients. We newly assessed 2884 patients with acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) who received HLA-matched allogeneic HSCT and analyzed their leukemia relapses by using adjusted competing-risk methods. HLA-C1/C1 patients with ALL experienced significantly higher relapse rates than HLA-C1/C2 patients (hazard ratio [HR] = 1.55, P =.003), contrary to our results in patients with myeloid leukemia. We allocated patients with ALL to several subgroups and found a higher frequency of relapse (HR >1.8) in the HLA-C1/C1 group than in the HLA-C1/C2 group among patients with Ph-negative ALL, those who had no cytomegalovirus reactivation, those who received transplants from donors who were aged 41 years or older, and those who experienced acute graft-versus-host disease, especially if it required systemic treatment. One interpretation of our results is that KIR2DL1-positive NK cells disrupt T cells, antigen-presenting cells, or both from working efficiently in transplant immunity in HLA-C1/C1 patients with ALL. Another is that KIR2DS1-positive NK cells directly attack HLA-C2-positive ALL blasts in HLA-C1/C2 patients. Whether HLA-C2 can cause recurrence to decrease or increase in patients depending on the disease (ALL or myeloid leukemia) will be a very important finding. We hope that our results will provide clues to the real mechanisms behind relapse after transplantation in patients with different HLA profiles. Image, graphical abstract [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
10838791
Volume :
26
Issue :
3
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Biology of Blood & Marrow Transplantation
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
141735266
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.bbmt.2019.10.032