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Post-Transplant Cyclophosphamide and Tacrolimus—Mycophenolate Mofetil Combination Governs GVHD and Immunosuppression Need, Reducing Late Toxicities in Allogeneic Peripheral Blood Hematopoietic Cell Transplantation from HLA-Matched Donors

Authors :
Fabrizio Carnevale-Schianca
Daniela Caravelli
Susanna Gallo
Paolo Becco
Luca Paruzzo
Stefano Poletto
Alessandra Polo
Monica Mangioni
Milena Salierno
Massimo Berger
Rosanna Pessolano
Francesco Saglio
Daniela Gottardi
Delia Rota-Scalabrini
Giovanni Grignani
Marco Fizzotti
Ivana Ferrero
Pio Manlio Mirko Frascione
Lorenzo D’Ambrosio
Valentina Gaidano
Loretta Gammaitoni
Dario Sangiolo
Andrea Saglietto
Elena Vassallo
Alessandro Cignetti
Massimo Aglietta
Franca Fagioli
Source :
Journal of Clinical Medicine, Vol 10, Iss 6, p 1173 (2021)
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
MDPI AG, 2021.

Abstract

Combined direct antineoplastic activity and the long-lasting immunological effects of allogeneic hematopoietic cell transplant (HCT) can cure many hematological malignancies, but broad adoption requires non-relapse mortality (NRM) rates and graft-versus-host disease (GVHD) control. Recently, posttransplant cyclophosphamide (PTCy) given after a bone marrow transplant significantly reduced GVHD-incidence, while PTCy given with tacrolimus/mofetil mycophenolate (T/MMF) showed activity following allogeneic peripheral blood stem cell transplantation (alloPBSCT). Here, we report the experience of a larger cohort (85 consecutive patients) and expanded follow-up period (03/2011–12/2019) with high-risk hematological malignancies who received alloPBSCT from Human-Leukocyte-Antigens HLA-matched unrelated/related donors. GVHD-prophylaxis was PTCy 50 mg/kg (days+3 and +4) combined with T/MMF (day+5 forward). All patients stopped MMF on day+28 with day+110 = median tacrolimus discontinuation. Cumulative incidences were 12% for acute and 7% for chronic GVHD- and no GVHD-attributed deaths. For surviving patients, the 12, 24, and 36-month probabilities of being off immunosuppression were 92, 96, and 96%, respectively. After a 36-month median follow-up, NRM was 4%; median event-free survival (EFS) and overall survival (OS) had yet to occur. One- and two-year chronic GVHD-EFS results were 57% (95% CI, 46–68%) and 53% (95% CI, 45–61%), respectively, with limited late infections and long-term organ toxicities. Disease relapse caused the most treatment failures (38% at 2 years), but low transplant toxicity allowed many patients (14/37, 38%) to receive donor lymphocyte infusions as a post-relapse strategy. We confirmed that PTCy+T/MMF treatment effectively prevented acute and chronic GVHD and limited NRM to unprecedented low rates without loss of disease control efficacy in an expanded patient cohort. This trial is registered at U.S. National Library of Medicine as #NCT02300571.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20770383
Volume :
10
Issue :
6
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Journal of Clinical Medicine
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.31d59d23d17a47b295f8acc94c28df67
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm10061173