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No Improvement of Survival for Alveolar Rhabdomyosarcoma Patients After HLA-Matched Versus -Mismatched Allogeneic Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation Compared to Standard-of-Care Therapy

Authors :
Schober, Sebastian Johannes
Hallmen, Erika
Ressle, Florian
Gassmann, Hendrik
Prexler, Carolin
Wawer, Angela
von Luettichau, Irene
Ladenstein, Ruth
Kazanowska, Bernarda
Ljungman, Gustaf
Niggli, Felix
Lohi, Olli
Hauer, Julia
Gruhn, Bernd
Klingebiel, Thomas
Bader, Peter
Burdach, Stefan
Lang, Peter
Sparber-Sauer, Monika
Koscielniak, Ewa
Thiel, Uwe
Schober, Sebastian Johannes
Hallmen, Erika
Ressle, Florian
Gassmann, Hendrik
Prexler, Carolin
Wawer, Angela
von Luettichau, Irene
Ladenstein, Ruth
Kazanowska, Bernarda
Ljungman, Gustaf
Niggli, Felix
Lohi, Olli
Hauer, Julia
Gruhn, Bernd
Klingebiel, Thomas
Bader, Peter
Burdach, Stefan
Lang, Peter
Sparber-Sauer, Monika
Koscielniak, Ewa
Thiel, Uwe
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

BackgroundPatients with stage IV alveolar rhabdomyosarcoma (RMA) have a 5-year-survival rate not exceeding 30%. Here, we assess the role of allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (allo-HSCT) for these patients in comparison to standard-of-care regimens. We also compare the use of HLA-mismatched vs. HLA-matched grafts after reduced vs. myeloablative conditioning regimens, respectively. Patients and MethodsIn this retrospective analysis, we compare event-free survival (EFS), overall survival (OS), and toxicity of HLA-mismatched vs. -matched transplanted patients in uni- and multivariate analyses (total: n = 50, HLA-matched: n = 15, HLA-mismatched: n = 35). Here, the factors age at diagnosis, age at allo-HSCT, sex, Oberlin score, disease status at allo-HSCT, and HLA graft type are assessed. For 29 primarily transplanted patients, three matched non-transplanted patients per one transplanted patient were identified from the CWS registry. Outcomes were respectively compared for OS and EFS. Matching criteria included sex, age at diagnosis, favorable/unfavorable primary tumor site, and metastatic sites. ResultsMedian EFS and OS did not differ significantly between HLA-mismatched and -matched patients. In the mismatched group, incidence of acute GvHD was 0.87 (grade III-IV: 0.14) vs. 0.80 in HLA-matched patients (grade III-IV: 0.20). Transplant-related mortality (TRM) of all patients was 0.20 and did not differ significantly between HLA-mismatched and -matched groups. A proportion of 0.58 relapsed or progressed and died of disease (HLA-mismatched: 0.66, HLA-matched: 0.53) whereas 0.18 were alive in complete remission (CR) at data collection. Multivariate and competing risk analyses confirmed CR and very good partial response (VGPR) status prior to allo-HSCT as the only decisive predictor for OS (p < 0.001). Matched-pair survival analyses of primarily transplanted patients vs. matched non-transplanted patients also identified disease status prior to allo-HSCT (

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
application/pdf, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1349080165
Document Type :
Electronic Resource
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3389.fonc.2022.878367