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Unrelated donor vs HLA-haploidentical a/b T-cell– and B-cell–depleted HSCT in children with acute leukemia

Authors :
Claudio Favre
Adriana Balduzzi
Franco Locatelli
Stella Boghen
Daria Pagliara
Anna Maria Gallina
Cesare Perotti
Franca Fagioli
Nicoletta Sacchi
Barbara Buldini
Mimmo Ripaldi
Manuela Tumino
Francesco Saglio
Gabriella Casazza
Marco Zecca
Edoardo Lanino
Walter Barberi
Francesca Del Bufalo
Marco Rabusin
Alice Bertaina
Valentina Bertaina
Simone Cesaro
Mattia Algeri
Arcangelo Prete
Bertaina, A
Zecca, M
Buldini, B
Sacchi, N
Algeri, M
Saglio, F
Perotti, C
Gallina, A
Bertaina, V
Lanino, E
Prete, A
Barberi, W
Tumino, M
Favre, C
Cesaro, S
Del Bufalo, F
Ripaldi, M
Boghen, S
Casazza, G
Rabusin, M
Balduzzi, A
Fagioli, F
Pagliara, D
Locatelli, F
Publication Year :
2018
Publisher :
American Society of Hematology, 2018.

Abstract

Traditionally, hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT) from both HLA-matched related and unrelated donors (UD) has been used for treating children with acute leukemia (AL) in need of an allograft. Recently, HLA-haploidentical HSCT after αβ T-cell/B-cell depletion (αβhaplo-HSCT) was shown to be effective in single-center studies. Here, we report the first multicenter retrospective analysis of 127 matched UD (MUD), 118 mismatched UD (MMUD), and 98 αβhaplo-HSCT recipients, transplanted between 2010 and 2015, in 13 Italian centers. All these AL children were transplanted in morphological remission after a myeloablative conditioning regimen. Graft failure occurred in 2% each of UD-HSCT and αβhaplo-HSCT groups. In MUD vs MMUD-HSCT recipients, the cumulative incidence of grade II to IV and grade III to IV acute graft-versus-host disease (GVHD) was 35% vs 44% and 6% vs 18%, respectively, compared with 16% and 0% in αβhaplo-HSCT recipients (P < .001). Children treated with αβhaplo-HSCT also had a significantly lower incidence of overall and extensive chronic GVHD (P < .01). Eight (6%) MUD, 32 (28%) MMUD, and 9 (9%) αβhaplo-HSCT patients died of transplant-related complications. With a median follow-up of 3.3 years, the 5-year probability of leukemia-free survival in the 3 groups was 67%, 55%, and 62%, respectively. In the 3 groups, chronic GVHD-free/relapse-free (GRFS) probability of survival was 61%, 34%, and 58%, respectively (P < .001). When compared with patients given MMUD-HSCT, αβhaplo-HSCT recipients had a lower cumulative incidence of nonrelapse mortality and a better GRFS (P < .001). These data indicate that αβhaplo-HSCT is a suitable therapeutic option for children with AL in need of transplantation, especially when an allele-matched UD is not available.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....7fd844e75dfd9c11a1e4a2cf664683d3