scholarly journals Autoimmune hemolysis and immune thrombocytopenic purpura after cord blood transplantation may be life-threatening and warrants early therapy with rituximab

2016 ◽  
Vol 51 (12) ◽  
pp. 1579-1583 ◽  
Author(s):  
V Bhatt ◽  
L Shune ◽  
E Lauer ◽  
M Lubin ◽  
S M Devlin ◽  
...  
Blood ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 124 (21) ◽  
pp. 1142-1142
Author(s):  
Valkal Bhatt ◽  
Leyla Shune ◽  
Emily J Lauer ◽  
Marissa N Lubin ◽  
Sean M. Devlin ◽  
...  

Abstract Introduction: Autoimmune hemolysis (AH) & immune thrombocytopenic purpura (ITP) are recognized complications of CBT. However, the incidence, severity, treatment response, & prognosis of these autoimmune cytopenias are not established. Methods: We evaluated AH/ITP after CBT in a landmark analysis of 152 patients who received double-unit grafts, had sustained donor engraftment, & were disease-free at 100 days post-transplant. This landmark was chosen as no patient has developed AH/ITP prior to day 100. CBT recipients (median 38 years, range 0.9-70) were transplanted for hematologic malignancies with myeloablative (MA) or non-myeloablative (NMA) conditioning and calcineurin-inhibitor (CNI)/mycophenolate mofetil immunosuppression. Results: With a median follow-up of survivors in this cohort of 50.6 months (range 7.6-105.4) post-CBT, 9 patients [median age 42 years (range 2-54), 5 MA & 4 NMA conditioning] have developed autoimmune cytopenias (7 AH, 1 ITP, 1 both). All AH patients were IgG Direct Antiglobulin Test (Coombs) positive and ITP diagnosis was made by standard criteria. The cumulative incidence of AH/ITP is 6% (95%CI:3-11) at 3-years after the day 100 landmark with a median onset of 8.6 months (range 5.8-24.5) post-CBT (Figure). Six patients presented with severe disease (Hb <6 gm/dl &/or plts <20) requiring immediate aggressive supportive care. The lowest counts (Hb 2.6-6.8 & plts 0-4) were observed a median of 1 day (range 0-94) after diagnosis. Six patients had grade II-IV acute GVHD (onset 17-175 days post-CBT, all prior to development of AH/ITP), and all 9 cases developed in the context of immunosuppression taper. No relationship was observed according to age, diagnosis (acute leukemia vs lymphoma), preparative regimen intensity (MA vs NMA), or recipient CMV serostatus. Treatment during the first week included IVIg/corticosteroids/rituximab in 3 patients or a variety of approaches (1 increased CNI dose, 2 IVIg only, 2 rituximab only, 1 corticosteroids/IVIg). Overall, all 9 patients received rituximab starting 2-18 days (4-6 doses) with initial treatment. Early rituximab at <7 days from diagnosis reduced time to complete response (CR, Hb >8 &/or plts >100): median 13 days (7-49 days) in 4 early rituximab patients vs 58 days (19-98 days) in 5 without early rituximab. Moreover, an initial IVIg/corticosteroids/rituximab combination was best (CR 7-13 days). Four patients flared after CR at 28-393 days & all patients achieved CR with further therapy. Three patients underwent splenectomy (2 with initial therapy & 1 with flare). Eight/9 AH/ITP patients are alive & disease-free (one patient died of GVHD in remission from AH). Seven/8 surviving patients are in CR from AH/ITP (median 30 months after AH/ITP diagnosis, range 9-102) & 1 has recurrent AH requiring therapy. Treatment was well tolerated although 4 patients required intermittent IVIg & 4 had transient neutropenia. Conclusions: AH/ITP occurs infrequently after CBT but is associated with sudden onset and may be life-threatening. The onset during immunosuppressant taper suggests the mechanism may be due to transient immune dysregulation at this time-point, and investigation of whether AH/ITP can be predicted from analysis of B-cell immune reconstitution is underway. IVIg/corticosteroid/rituximab combination is appropriate initial therapy in severe disease & our data suggests this is the most effective although the role of IVIg is unclear. Earlier treatment with Rituximab may reduce corticosteroid exposure & avoid early splenectomy. While the optimal treatment regimen is not established, our series suggests rituximab is essential to achieve & maintain CR & has an excellent safety profile. Finally, survival was high in AH/ITP patients with no deaths from this complication although this was likely contingent on aggressive supportive care in these patients. Figure 1 Figure 1. Disclosures No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


2006 ◽  
Vol 47 (6) ◽  
pp. 1173-1175
Author(s):  
Christelle Ferra ◽  
Juan-Manuel Sancho ◽  
Blanca Xicoy ◽  
Montserrat Batlle ◽  
Joan-Ramón Grifols ◽  
...  

Haematologica ◽  
2020 ◽  
pp. 0-0
Author(s):  
Effie W. Petersdorf ◽  
Ted Gooley ◽  
Fernanda Volt ◽  
Chantal Kenzey ◽  
Alejandro Madrigal ◽  
...  

Cord-blood transplantation (CBT) can cure life-threatening blood disorders. The HLA-B leader affects the success of unrelated donor transplantation but its role in CBT is unknown. We tested the hypothesis that the HLA-B leader influences CBT outcomes in unrelated single-unit cord-blood transplants performed by Eurocord/European Blood and Marrow Transplant (EBMT) centers between 1990 and 2018 with data reported to Eurocord. Among 4822 transplants, 2178 had one HLA-B mismatch of which 1013 were HLA-A and HLA-DRB1-matched. The leader (M or T) was determined for each HLA-B allele in patients and units to define the genotype. Among single HLA-B-mismatched transplants, the patient/unit mismatched alleles were defined as leader-matched if they encoded the same leader, or leader-mismatched if they encoded different leaders; the leader encoded by the matched (shared) allele was determined. The risks of GVHD, relapse, non-relapse mortality and overall mortality were estimated for various leaderdefined groups using multivariable regression models. Among the 1013 HLA-A, -DRB1- matched transplants with one HLA-B mismatch, increasing numbers of cord-blood unit M-leader alleles was associated with increased risk of relapse (hazard ratio [HR] for each increase in one M-leader allele 1.30, 95% confidence interval [CI] 1.05 to 1.60, P 0.02). Furthermore, leader mismatching together with an M-leader of the shared HLA-B allele lowered non-relapse mortality (HR 0.44, 95% CI 0.23 to 0.81; P 0.009) relative to leader-matching and a shared T-leader allele. The HLA-B leader may inform relapse and non-relapse mortality risk after CBT. Future patients might benefit from the appropriate selection of units that consider the leader.


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