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Incorporation of extracorporeal photopheresis into a reduced intensity conditioning regimen in myelodysplastic syndrome and aggressive lymphoma: results from ECOG 1402 and 1902

Authors :
David Avigan
Martin S. Tallman
Mark R. Litzow
Kellie Sprague
Francine M. Foss
Henry N. Wagner
Xin Victoria Wang
Roger Strair
Sandra J. Horning
William J. Hogan
Randall D. Gascoyne
Opeyemi Jegede
Theresa L. Whiteside
Selina M. Luger
Daniel A. Arber
Hillard M. Lazarus
Edward A. Stadtmauer
Kenneth B. Miller
Source :
Transfusion
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Wiley, 2020.

Abstract

Background Extracorporeal photopheresis (ECP) is an immunomodulatory cellular therapy which has been shown to induce a tolerogenic state in patients with acute and chronic graft-vs-host disease. ECOG-ACRIN explored the activity of ECP as a part of a reduced intensity conditioning regimen in two multicenter trials in patients with MDS (E1902) and lymphomas (E1402). While both studies closed before completing accrual, we report results in 23 patients (17 MDS and 6 lymphoma). Study design and methods Patients received 2 days of ECP followed by pentostatin 4 mg/m2 /day for two consecutive days, followed by 600 cGy of total body irradiation prior to stem cell infusion. Immunosuppression for aGVHD was infusional cyclosporine A or tacrolimus and methotrexate on day +1, +3, with mycophenolate mofetil starting on day 100 for chronic GVHD prophylaxis. Results All patients engrafted, with median time to neutrophil and platelet engraftment of 15-18 days and 10-18 days respectively. Grade 3 or 4 aGVHD occurred in 13% and chronic extensive GVHD in 30%. Conclusions These studies demonstrate that ECP/pentostatin/TBI is well tolerated and associated with adequate engraftment of neutrophils and platelets in patients with lymphomas and MDS.

Details

ISSN :
15372995 and 00411132
Volume :
60
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Transfusion
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....6fd62d39cf6ea830be2a42da9df24a59