scholarly journals Therapy-Related Myeloid Neoplasms Following Autologous Stem Cell Transplantation: The Prevalence of Chip Mutations at Time of Transplantation — a Single Center Experience

Blood ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 132 (Supplement 1) ◽  
pp. 1529-1529
Author(s):  
Johannes Frasez Soerensen ◽  
Anni Aggerholm ◽  
Gitte Birk Kerndrup ◽  
Marcus C Hansen ◽  
Ina Kathrine Lykke Ewald ◽  
...  

Abstract Introduction: Therapy-related myeloid neoplasms (tMN) are high-risk conditions evolved after exposure to a number of agents, including cytotoxic therapy, and include myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS), acute myeloid leukemia (AML) and myeloproliferative neoplasms (MPN). As such cytoreduction as part of autologous stem cell transplantation (ASCT) increases the risk of developing tMN. Importantly, both the use of ASCT and the incidence of tMN are rising. The recent characterization of clonal hematopoiesis of indeterminate potential (CHIP) has, in preliminary reports, been shown to increase the risk of developing de novo hematological disease as well as tMN. We hypothesized that patients with non-myeloid primary disease who develop tMN after ASCT, had detectable myeloid mutations at time of transplantation, and that these may represent a risk factor in the development of tMN. This study characterizes tMN patients previously subjected to ASCT and investigates whether CHIP mutations are present in hematopoietic stem cells at time of ASCT. Methods: The cohort of this observational study consists of patients treated with ASCT at the Department of Hematology, Aarhus University Hospital (Denmark) from 1989 to 2016. Cases were identified via the Danish Pathology Registry and all tMN diagnoses were verified by the same experienced hemopathologist (GBK). Only cases from patients with non-myeloid primary disease, who were diagnosed with tMN after being treated with ASCT (minimum latency being 90 days) were included. 36 cases with available leukapheresis products were identified out of a cohort of 1130 patients. Samples collected from leukapheresis prior to ASCT were subjected to targeted next-generation sequencing (NGS), using the commercially available panel "Myeloid Solution" (Sophia Genetics, Saint Sulpice, Switzerland), covering 30 genes relevant for myeloid neoplasms, joined with a bioinformatics pipeline from Sophia Genetics. Samples from 31 patients have been subjected to NGS. Variants residing in or within ± 25 nucleotides of coding exons and with coverage >5000 at the variant site were reported. Indels present in polynucleotide stretches were excluded. Data for continuous variables age, latency to tMN and survival were analyzed as one sample from a normal distribution based on the Students t-test. Normality was assessed via Q-Q plot. Estimates are reported with a 95% confidence intervals (Stata, version 15.1, StataCorp LLC, TX, USA). Results: The cohort consisted of 25 males (80.7%) and 6 females (19.3%), with an estimated median age at ASCT of 58 years (CI 95% 54;63). Estimated median time to tMN was 3.7 years (CI 95% 2.5;5.4) and estimated median survival after tMN diagnosis was 132 days (CI 95% 71;246). At time of tMN diagnosis, 14 patients had a poor risk karyotype and 9 patients had intermediate risk karyotype (hereof 4 normal karyotype). Karyotype was not evaluated in 8 patients. CHIP mutations were detected in stem cell enriched leukapheresis products from 21 patients (67.7%). Of these, we found multiple mutations in 14 patients (66%) and in one patient as many as 6 CHIP mutations. Point mutations were frequently found in the DNMT3A gene and was present in 16 out of 21 patients (76%). Six patients had more than one DNMT3A mutation, one of which had 5 separate DNMT3A mutations. Other mutations detected were TP53 (6/21), TET2 (5/21), ASXL1 (4/21), EZH2 (1/21), WT1 (1/21), JAK2 (1/21), NRAS (1/21), HRAS (1/21), BRAF (1/21), CSF3R (1/21), SF3B1 (1/21), ZRSR2 (1/21), CALR (1/21), SRSF2 (1/21). Conclusion: We found that CHIP mutations can be detected at time of ASCT in patients being treated for non-myeloid diseases. We hypothesize that presence of CHIP mutations at ASCT may predict the development of tMN and as such serve as a biomarker in this setting. We speculate that high-dose cytotoxic therapy may provide an evolutionary advantage for hematopoietic clones containing CHIP mutations. On the other hand, we cannot rule out that the cytoreduction administered prior at ASCT may be a main contributor to the tMN development. To address this as well as the development of tMN in the post-ASCT phase, a nested case-control study will be necessary. Disclosures No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.

2012 ◽  
Vol 4 (1) ◽  
pp. e2012069 ◽  
Author(s):  
Patrizia Tosi ◽  
Manuela Imola ◽  
Mianulli Anna Maria ◽  
Simona Tomassetti ◽  
Anna Merli ◽  
...  

Autologous stem cell transplantation is considered the standard of care for multiple myeloma patients aged < 65 years with no relevant comorbidities. The addition of drugs acting both on bone marrow microenvironment and on neoplastic plasma cells has significantly increased the proportion of patients achieving a complete remission after induction therapy, and these results are mantained after high-dose melphalan, leading to a prolonged disease control. Studies are being carried out in order to evaluate whether short term consolidation or long-term maintenance therapy can result into disease eradication at the molecular level thus increasing also patients survival. The efficacy of these new drugs has raised the issue of deferring the transplant after achivng a second response upon relapse. Another controversial point is the optimal treatment strategy for high-risk patients, that do not benefit from autologous stem cell transplantation and for whom the efficacy of new drugs is still matter of debate.


Blood ◽  
2008 ◽  
Vol 112 (11) ◽  
pp. 2191-2191
Author(s):  
Anna Sureda ◽  
Carme Canals ◽  
Nicolas Mounier ◽  
Roberto Foa ◽  
Eulogio Conde ◽  
...  

Abstract Autologous stem cell transplantation (ASCT) remains the treatment of choice for patients (pts) with diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL) that relapse after first line chemotherapy (CT). Nevertheless, the impact of the use of the anti-CD20 monoclonal antibody (Rituximab®) (RTX) with combination CT on the ulterior results of the transplantation procedure has to be determined. One of the main factors affecting survival after ASCT is a short first remission duration. This study was designed to evaluate the benefit of this strategy, in pts with DLBCL achieving after salvage CT a 2nd complete remission (CR2), by retrospectively comparing for each pt the progression free survival (PFS) after ASCT with the duration of the previous CR. Adult DLBCL pts with MEDB information available autografted in CR2 between 1990 and 2005 in EBMT centres were included in the analysis. A total of 386 pts (224 males, median age 47 (18–71) years] were evaluated. 294 pts (74%) did not receive RTX prior to ASCT, 67 pts (17%) did receive it at all and in 34 pts (9%) this information is missing. Duration of CR1 was 12 (3 – 142) months [median (range)]; it lasted less than 6 months in 25% of the cases and was longer than 24 months in 25% of the pts. Median time from diagnosis to ASCT was 25 (6–181) months. Peripheral blood was used as the source of hematopoietic stem cells in 311 pts (81%). The BEAM protocol was the conditioning regimen most frequently used (n = 244, 63%) and only 5.5% pts were conditioned with TBI-containing regimens. After a median follow up after ASCT for surviving pts of 42 months, overall survival (OS) was 63% and PFS 48%. 158 pts did relapse after ASCT [median (range), 10 (3–200) months] and 32 pts died from non-relapse mortality. When each patient was taken as her/his own control, PFS after ASCT was longer than CR1 (p &lt; 0.001). During the initial phase of the disease, 74% pts experienced 1st relapse in less than 2 years, compared with only 32% of the patients who experienced 2nd relapse 2 years after ASCT. The use of RTX prior to ASCT did not impair the beneficial effects of the autologous procedure in the whole population of pts (RTX no: 66% vs 33%, p &lt; 0.001; RTX yes: 73% vs 26%, p = 0.001). 2-years PFS after ASCT was significantly lower in patients with a CR1 &lt; 12 months (p &lt; 0.001). However, in this subgroup of patients PFS after ASCT was significantly longer than CR1 duration when studying each pt as his/her own control (p = 0.001). ASCT can significantly increase PFS in comparison with the duration of CR2 in DLBCL and can change disease course. The use of RTX prior to ASCT does not decrease the beneficial effect of pts autografted in CR2 when compared to their prior CR1 duration. The duration of CR1 remains one of the most important prognostic factors for ASCT outcome.


2001 ◽  
Vol 28 (4) ◽  
pp. 377-388 ◽  
Author(s):  
Roy D. Baynes ◽  
Roger D. Dansey ◽  
Jared L. Klein ◽  
Caroline Hamm ◽  
Mark Campbell ◽  
...  

2017 ◽  
Vol 63 (2) ◽  
pp. 326-328
Author(s):  
Larisa Filatova ◽  
Yevgeniya Kharchenko ◽  
Sergey Alekseev ◽  
Ilya Zyuzgin ◽  
Anna Artemeva ◽  
...  

Currently there is no single approach to treatment for aggressive diffuse large-cell B-cell lymphoma (Double-HIT and Triple-HIT). Accumulated world data remain controversial and, given the unfavorable prognosis in this subgroup, high-dose chemotherapy with autologous stem cell transplantation in the first line of treatment is a therapeutic option.


Author(s):  
Benjamin W Teh ◽  
Vivian K Y Leung ◽  
Francesca L Mordant ◽  
Sheena G Sullivan ◽  
Trish Joyce ◽  
...  

Abstract Background Seroprotection and seroconversion rates are not well understood for 2-dose inactivated influenza vaccination (IIV) schedules in autologous hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (autoHCT) patients. Methods A randomized, single-blind, controlled trial of IIV in autoHCT patients in their first year post-transplant was conducted. Patients were randomized 1:1 to high-dose (HD) IIV followed by standard dose (SD) vaccine (HD-SD arm) or 2 SD vaccines (SD-SD arm) 4 weeks apart. Hemagglutination inhibition (HI) assay for IIV strains was performed at baseline, 1, 2, and 6 months post–first dose. Evaluable primary outcomes were seroprotection (HI titer ≥40) and seroconversion (4-fold titer increase) rates and secondary outcomes were geometric mean titers (GMTs), GMT ratios (GMRs), adverse events, influenza-like illness (ILI), and laboratory-confirmed influenza (LCI) rates and factors associated with seroconversion. Results Sixty-eight patients were enrolled (34/arm) with median age of 61.5 years, majority male (68%) with myeloma (68%). Median time from autoHCT to vaccination was 2.3 months. For HD-SD and SD-SD arms, percentages of patients achieving seroprotection were 75.8% and 79.4% for H1N1, 84.9% and 88.2% for H3N2 (all P &gt; .05), and 78.8% and 97.1% for influenza-B/Yamagata (P = .03), respectively. Seroconversion rates, GMTs and GMRs, and number of ILI or LCIs were not significantly different between arms. Adverse event rates were similar. Receipt of concurrent cancer therapy was independently associated with higher odds of seroconversion (OR, 4.3; 95% CI, 1.2–14.9; P = .02). Conclusions High seroprotection and seroconversion rates against all influenza strains can be achieved with vaccination as early as 2 months post-autoHCT with either 2-dose vaccine schedules. Clinical Trials Registration Australian New Zealand Clinical Trials Registry: ACTRN12619000617167.


2020 ◽  
Vol 2 (Supplement_3) ◽  
pp. ii2-ii2
Author(s):  
Eisei Kondo

Abstract High-dose chemotherapy followed by autologous hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HDT-ASCT) is listed as a consolidation therapy option for primary central nervous system (CNS) lymphoma in the guidelines of western countries. The advantages of HDT-ASCT for primary CNS lymphoma as consolidation are believed to be high rates of long-term remission and lower neurotoxicity, even though its eligibility is limited to younger fit patients. In the Japanese guideline, HDT-ASCT for primary CNS lymphoma is however not recommended in daily practice, mainly because thiotepa was unavailable since 2011. The Japanese registry data for hematopoietic transplantation have shown that primary CNS lymphoma patients were treated with various HDT regimens and thiotepa-containing HDT was associated with better progression free survival (P=.019), lower relapse (P=.042) and a trend toward a survival benefit (Kondo E et al, Biol Blood Marrow Transplant 2019). A pharmacokinetic study of thiotepa(DSP-1958) in HDT-ASCT for lymphoma was conducted in 2017, and thiotepa was approved for HDT-ASCT in lymphoma this March, meaning that optimal HDT regimen for CNS lymphoma is now available in Japan. The treatment strategy of CNS lymphoma needs further development to improve survival and reduce toxicity.


2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (3) ◽  
Author(s):  
Kalyan Nadiminti ◽  
M. Hasib Sidiqi ◽  
Kapil Meleveedu ◽  
Hassan B. Alkhateeb ◽  
William J. Hogan ◽  
...  

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