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Neighborhood poverty and pediatric allogeneic hematopoietic cell transplantation outcomes: a CIBMTR analysis

Authors :
C. Fred LeMaistre
Minoo Battiwalla
Amir Steinberg
Wael Saber
Biju George
Siddhartha Ganguly
Theresa Hahn
Navneet S. Majhail
Naya He
Cesar O. Freytes
Staci D. Arnold
Jennifer M. Knight
Sachiko Seo
Ruta Brazauskas
Rammurti T. Kamble
Leslie Lehmann
Richard F. Olsson
Mahmoud Aljurf
Shahrukh K. Hashmi
Miguel Angel Diaz
Alok Srivastava
Christopher E. Dandoy
Hillard M. Lazarus
Jason Law
Nandita Khera
Baldeep Wirk
Ayami Yoshimi
Haydar Frangoul
Akshay Sharma
Neel S. Bhatt
Raquel M. Schears
David Szwajcer
Jaime M. Preussler
Ibrahim Ahmed
David Gómez-Almaguer
William A. Wood
Christine Duncan
Bipin N. Savani
Sherif M. Badawy
A. Samer Al-Homsi
Kira Bona
Jignesh Dalal
Hisham Abdel-Azim
Sara Beattie
Source :
Blood
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
American Society of Hematology, 2021.

Abstract

Social determinants of health, including poverty, contribute significantly to health outcomes in the United States; however, their impact on pediatric hematopoietic cell transplantation (HCT) outcomes is poorly understood. We aimed to identify the association between neighborhood poverty and HCT outcomes for pediatric allogeneic HCT recipients in the Center for International Blood and Marrow Transplant Research database. We assembled 2 pediatric cohorts undergoing first allogeneic HCT from 2006 to 2015 at age ≤18 years, including 2053 children with malignant disease and 1696 children with nonmalignant disease. Neighborhood poverty exposure was defined a priori per the US Census definition as living in a high-poverty ZIP code (≥20% of persons below 100% federal poverty level) and used as the primary predictor in all analyses. Our primary outcome was overall survival (OS), defined as the time from HCT until death resulting from any cause. Secondary outcomes included relapse and transplantation-related mortality (TRM) in malignant disease, acute and chronic graft-versus-host disease, and infection in the first 100 days post-HCT. Among children undergoing transplantation for nonmalignant disease, neighborhood poverty was not associated with any HCT outcome. Among children undergoing transplantation for malignant disease, neighborhood poverty conferred an increased risk of TRM but was not associated with inferior OS or any other transplantation outcome. Among children with malignant disease, a key secondary finding was that children with Medicaid insurance experienced inferior OS and increased TRM compared with those with private insurance. These data suggest opportunities for future investigation of the effects of household-level poverty exposure on HCT outcomes in pediatric malignant disease to inform care delivery interventions.

Details

ISSN :
15280020 and 00064971
Volume :
137
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Blood
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....f626974199ece254c408faddf1714219