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COVID-19 and stem cell transplantation; results from an EBMT and GETH multicenter prospective survey

Authors :
National Institute for Health Research (UK)
Ljungman, Per
Cámara, Rafael de la
Mikulska, Malgorzata
Tridello, Gloria
Aguado, Beatriz
Al Zahrani, Mohsen
Apperley, Jane
Berceanu, Ana
Martino, Rodrigo
Calbacho, M.
Ciceri, Fabio
López-Corral, L.
Crippa, Claudia
Fox, María‐Laura
Grassi, Anna
Jiménez, María J.
Koçulu Demir, Safiye
Kwon, Mi
Vallejo Llamas, Carlos
López Lorenzo, José Luis
Mielke, Stephan
Orchard, Kim
Parody Porras, Rocío
Vallisa, Daniele
Xhaard, Alienor
Simone Knelange, Nina
Cedillo, Ángel
Kroger, Nicolaus
Piñana, José Luis
Styczynski, Jan
National Institute for Health Research (UK)
Ljungman, Per
Cámara, Rafael de la
Mikulska, Malgorzata
Tridello, Gloria
Aguado, Beatriz
Al Zahrani, Mohsen
Apperley, Jane
Berceanu, Ana
Martino, Rodrigo
Calbacho, M.
Ciceri, Fabio
López-Corral, L.
Crippa, Claudia
Fox, María‐Laura
Grassi, Anna
Jiménez, María J.
Koçulu Demir, Safiye
Kwon, Mi
Vallejo Llamas, Carlos
López Lorenzo, José Luis
Mielke, Stephan
Orchard, Kim
Parody Porras, Rocío
Vallisa, Daniele
Xhaard, Alienor
Simone Knelange, Nina
Cedillo, Ángel
Kroger, Nicolaus
Piñana, José Luis
Styczynski, Jan
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

This study reports on 382 COVID-19 patients having undergone allogeneic (n = 236) or autologous (n = 146) hematopoietic cell transplantation (HCT) reported to the European Society for Blood and Marrow Transplantation (EBMT) or to the Spanish Group of Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation (GETH). The median age was 54.1 years (1.0–80.3) for allogeneic, and 60.6 years (7.7–81.6) for autologous HCT patients. The median time from HCT to COVID-19 was 15.8 months (0.2–292.7) in allogeneic and 24.6 months (−0.9 to 350.3) in autologous recipients. 83.5% developed lower respiratory tract disease and 22.5% were admitted to an ICU. Overall survival at 6 weeks from diagnosis was 77.9% and 72.1% in allogeneic and autologous recipients, respectively. Children had a survival of 93.4%. In multivariate analysis, older age (p = 0.02), need for ICU (p < 0.0001) and moderate/high immunodeficiency index (p = 0.04) increased the risk while better performance status (p = 0.001) decreased the risk for mortality. Other factors such as underlying diagnosis, time from HCT, GVHD, or ongoing immunosuppression did not significantly impact overall survival. We conclude that HCT patients are at high risk of developing LRTD, require admission to ICU, and have increased mortality in COVID-19.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1306017492
Document Type :
Electronic Resource