GCSF-Primed Allo-BMT Following Reduced Intensity Conditioning Regimen In Children with AML- Good Outcome In Patients In 1 st Complete Remission with Rapid Neutrophil Engraftment and Low Incidence of Chronic Gvhd.

Blood ◽  
2010 ◽  
Vol 116 (21) ◽  
pp. 4566-4566
Author(s):  
Fabiana Ostronoff ◽  
Mauricio Ostronoff ◽  
ANA Patricia Souto Maior ◽  
Rodolfo Calixto ◽  
Monique Martins ◽  
...  

Abstract Abstract 4566 There are few data on reduced intensity conditioning regimen in children with AML and no data for GCSF-primed BMT in this patient population. The related donors for these patients are commonly children as well and the peripheral blood stem cells collection is not often indicated. Primed-GCSF bone marrow harvest yields a higher number of CD34+ cells and a lower number of lymphocytes when compared to PBSCT resulting in faster neutrophil recovery and lower rate of chronic GVHD. From 2003 to 2009, we performed 12 GCSF-primed BMT in children with AML in our center median age 8 y (2-12); 10‰, 2 S; 8 pts in first CR (1 pt with AML 2ary to ALL-T treatment; 1 AML M7; 1 induction failure) and 04 pts with ≥ 2nd CR. FAB classification: 7 patients had AML M2; 2, AML M4; 1, AML-M5; 2, AML M7). These patients were not eligible for myeloablative SCT due to aspergilosis (4 patients), hepato-splenic abscess due to candidia (1 patient), recent sepsis due to Candida 2 pts, giant hamartoma causing restrictive pulmonary disease, severe asthma (1 patient), elevated transaminitis (greater than 5 times of the upper normal limit) due to recent multiple chemotherapies (2 patients), recent treatments with myeolosuppresive chemotherapies greater than 4 cycles complicated by recent infection (2 patients). The protocol was approved by our institutional review board and informed consent was obtained from each patient and donor and or their guardians. Conditioning consisted of fludarabine and TBI in 2 patients; busulfan 4mg/kg/day (day -5 and day -4) and fludarabine 30 mg/m2/day (from day-7 to day -2) in 9 patients. Three of these patients also received Ara-C 1g/m2 (day-5 to day -2). One patient undergoing unrelated donor BMT was conditioned with busulfan 4mg/kg/day (day -5 and day -4) and fludarabine 30 mg/m2/day (from day-7 to day -2) and ATG 10mg/kg/day (day -4 to day -1). GVHD prophylaxis consisted of CSA 5mg/kg/day orally from day -1 to day +90 and MMF 45mg/kg/day orally until day +30. The donors received G-CSF 5 μ g/kg/d subcutaneously for five days (day –4 to day 0) prior to harvest the bone marrow. The median age of the related donors was 9 years (range, 4 to 18 years). The stem cells harvest from the unrelated donor was not primed with GCSF. The median CD34+, CD3+ and CD8+ cell counts collected were respectively 3.5×106 cells/kg (2.5 - 5.0), 32 ×106 cells/kg (29 - 59) and 13×106 cells/kg (12- 25). All patients received GCSF 10 micrograms/kg/day SC from day +1 until neutrophil engraftment. Only 8/12 pts had neutrophil counts ≤ 500/mm3 for a short interval: median 3 days (2-8). There were no infectious complications and all CMV antigenemias were negative. The transfusion requirement was low for all patients. One patient rejected the graft on day+30 and 3 patients had mix chimerism on day +30 and relapsed few weeks later. All the other patients had complete chimerism on day +30 and continue to have stable complete chimerism thereafter. Grade >=II acute GVHD occurred in 2 patients (16.5%). Only one patient who underwent unrelated donor transplantation had steroid-resistant GVHD which responded to alemtuzumab. There were no deaths related to the transplant. Five patients died due to relapsed leukemia 2,3,3,4 and 19 months after the transplant the savage therapy was very difficult: 2 of these pts had chemotherapy refractory leukemia, 2 pts were refractory to conventional BMT and one pt had aspergilosis after the second conventional BMT. This pt had a previous history of aspergilosis. Seven of the 12 patients (58%) are alive and in complete remission of their leukemia 1,2,3,3,4,6 and 7 years after BMT. None of the patients developed extensive chronic GVHD. Among the patients who survived, there were5/7 (71%) is first CR including one case of secondary AML, the case of AML-M7 and one pt who had failed induction chemotherapy. RIC in children who are not eligible for myeloablative SCT can be well tolerated and successful specially in patients who are in first complete remission. In addition, primed-GCSF BMT can be a good strategy to achieve rapid neutrophil engraftment with low rate of chronic GVHD. Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.

Blood ◽  
2005 ◽  
Vol 106 (11) ◽  
pp. 2894-2894
Author(s):  
Nabil Kabbara ◽  
Vanderson Rocha ◽  
Marie Robin ◽  
Agnes Devergie ◽  
Patricia Ribaud ◽  
...  

Abstract Allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT) with HLA geno-identical sibling donor is the treatment of choice for children and young adults with constitutional or acquired (SAA) bone marrow failure (BMF). However, results of unrelated HSCT for BMF have been poorer due to high transplant related mortality mainly related to rejection and GVHD. Generally, a myeloablative regimen HSCT is used for acquired and some constitutional BMF but not for Fanconi anemia (FA) patients for whom a low dose conditioning regimen is employed. We have driven the hypothesis that immunosuppressive reduced intensity conditioning regimen should decrease TRM, decreasing GVHD and allowing engraftment. In a Phase I-II trial, 20 patients (pts) with BMF were enrolled and transplanted between 2002 and 2004. Thirteen pts had a constitutional aplasia: FA n=11, congenital megakaryocytopenia (CMK) n=1, Rothmund-Thomson syndrome n=1 and 7 pts had SAA among those two had paroxystic nocturnal hemoglobinuria (PNH). There were 12 male and 8 female. Median age was 8 years for constitutional BMF and 26 years for SAA. The HSC source was bone marrow for 11 pts, PBSC for 1 pt and cord blood for 8 pts. Ten of the twelve BM or PBSC donors were HLA matched for 10 loci (A, B, C, DRB1, and DQB1) and eight cord blood donors were HLA mismatched with 2 generic differences and were used for FA. All pts received the same conditioning regimen consisting of Busulfan (3mg/kg x 2), cyclophosphamide (10mg/kg x 4), fludarabine (30mg/m2 x3) and ATG (2.5mg/kg x4). The mean of nucleated stem cells infused and CD34 + cells was 2.8x108/kg and 5.9x106/kg respectively for the 12 pts who received BM stem cells and PBSC and 6.4x107/kg and 4.6x106/kg respectively for the eight pts who received CB cells. Acute GVH disease prophylaxis consisted of ciclosporine A (CsA) for pts with constitutional BMF and CsA and short course methotrexate for 6 of the 7 pts with acquired BMF, (one received tacrolimus instead of CsA due to thrombotic pre-existing co-morbidity). One pt (with CMK) died on day 0 from cerebral haemorrhage. Eighteen pts out of 19 had WBC recovery with a median time of 23 days (11–42); one FA pt did never reach sustained engraftment and died at D+291 from adenovirus infection. Three others had late graft rejection: in a context of acute GvHD and EBV infection and pulmonary aspergillosis for two pts with SAA who received BM graft and with acute GvHD and adenovirus infection for one FA pt who received CB graft. The conditioning was well tolerated without severe mucositis even in FA patients, sixteen patients experienced transient liver abnormalities. Nine patients developed reversible haemorrhagic cystitis at a median of 47 days post-transplant. There were 3 bacterial, 10 viral and 5 fungal infections with a cumulative incidence of TRM at one year of 45 ±24%. The cumulative incidence of acute GVH (II–IV) was 50 ±23%. Overall survival (OS) at one year was 55±11 %. It was 86%± 13 for SAA and 38% ± 13 for constitutional BMF. In spite of the short follow-up and few patients included, reduced intensity conditioning regimen provides encouraging results for patients with SAA. For constitutional BMF, low toxicity was observed, however the overall results seem similar to those reported in the literature using other RIC regimen and are probably related to other factors than the conditioning regimen.


Blood ◽  
2008 ◽  
Vol 112 (11) ◽  
pp. 1962-1962
Author(s):  
Birgit Federmann ◽  
Martin Bornhauser ◽  
Dietrich W. Beelen ◽  
Gernot Stuhler ◽  
Lambros Kordelas ◽  
...  

Abstract Haploidentical hematopoietic cell transplantation (HHCT) after high dose conditioning with a megadose of CD34-selected stem cells has been complicated by regimen related toxicities, slow engraftment and delayed immune reconstitution leading to high treatment related mortality (TRM). A new regimen using reduced intensity conditioning (RIC) and immunomagnetic CD3/CD19 graft depletion may allow HHCT with lower toxicity and faster engraftment. CD3/CD19 depleted grafts not only contain CD34+ stem cells but also graft-facilitating cells, CD34- progenitors, dendritic and natural killer cells which may allow stable engraftment even without a megadose of CD34+ cells. A multicenter phase I/II study of HHCT using RIC with fludarabine (150–200 mg/m2), thiotepa (10 mg/kg), melphalan (120 mg/m2), OKT-3 (5 mg/day, day -5 to +14) and CD3/CD19 graft depletion has been initiated. No post grafting immunosuppression was applied if the graft contained <5x104 CD3+ cells/kg. To date, 51 patients with a median age of 45 years (range, 19–65) have been enrolled in this study. Diagnosis were AML (n=34), ALL (n=7), NHL (n=6), MM (n=2), and CML (n=2). Patients were “high risk” because of relapsed or refractory disease (n=30), or relapse after preceding HCT (auto=7, allo=14). Stage at HCT was complete remission (n=25) and partial remission (n=26). The CD3/CD19 depleted haploidentical grafts contained a median of 7.1 x 106 (range, 3.4–18x106) CD34+cells/kg, 3.9 x104 (range, 0.6–44x104) CD3+T cells/kg and 2.8x107 (range, 0.02–37.3x107) CD56+cells/kg. The regimen was well tolerated with maximum acute toxicity being CTC-grade 1–2 mucositis. Five cases of reversible peripheral neuropathy and three cases of progressive multifocal leukencephalopathy (PML) occurred posttransplant in heavily pretreated patients. Engraftment was rapid with median time to >500 granulocytes/μL of 12 days (range, 9–50) and to >20000 platelets/μL of 11 days (range, 7–38). Full donor chimerism was reached after 2–4 weeks in all but four patients (median of 14 days (range, 7–215)). Four patients experienced rejection/non-engraftment, two were rescued by a second CD3/CD19 depleted graft from another haploidentical donor. Incidence of grade II-IV acute GVHD was 51% with grade II=16, III=6 and IV=4. So far there are six cases of limited chronic GVHD and one case of extensive chronic GVHD. TRM in the first 100 days was 11/51 (22%) and overall 20/51 (39%). Overall survival is 17/51 patients (33%) with deaths due to relapse (n=14), infection (n=15), PML (n=2), GVHD (n=2) and cardiac failure (n=1), with a median follow-up of alive patients of 397 days (range, 62–1180). This results in a Kaplan-Meier estimate 1-year survival of 37%. So far, we did not observe a statistical significant survival advantage for patient transplanted from a KIR-mismatched donor (28/51 patients). This regimen with low toxicity as well as fast and sustained engraftment is promising in high risk patients lacking a suitable donor. To investigate the treatment protocol earlier in course of disease a new study for high-risk patients with acute leukemia in first complete remission is in preparation.


Blood ◽  
2009 ◽  
Vol 114 (22) ◽  
pp. 873-873
Author(s):  
Andrea Toma ◽  
Marie-Lorraine Balère-Appert ◽  
Jean-Michel Boiron ◽  
Pierre Bordigoni ◽  
Gerard Socie ◽  
...  

Abstract Abstract 873 The use of peripheral blood stem cells (PBSC) for hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT) is associated with a higher risk of chronic graft versus host disease (GvHD) but its impact on survival is not clear since it may favor a greater graft versus leukemia (GvL) effect. However, in the context of HSCT from unrelated donors (UD), the balance between GvH and GvL may differ from the context of sibling donors and thus the use of PBSC may be deleterious. In this retrospective study, we analyzed 103 patients from the french registry who received a graft from an UD after a reduced intensity conditioning regimen (RIC) to evaluate the role of various parameters including the source of stem cells on the outcome. Seventy-one D/R pairs (69%) were 10/10 HLA match at the allelic level. Mismatches concerned 5, 6, 15, 2 and 7 D/R pairs for HLA-A, -B, -C, -DRB1 and -DQB1, respectively. The median age was 46 years (18-67). All patients had hematologic malignancies: AL (n=35), MM (n=18), CLL (n=5), NHL (n=11), HD (n=9), CML (n=12), MDS (n=9), and MPS (n=4). 39% of the patients were in an advanced phase of the disease at time of HSCT. The conditioning regimen was Fluda/TBI 2Gys for 26 patients, Bu/Fluda/ATG for 24 patients, Fluda/Melph for 16 patients and others for 37 patients. Overall, anti-thymocytes globulins (ATG) were part of the conditioning regimen for 77% of patients. The source of stem cells was PBSC for 65 patients and bone marrow (BM) for 38 patients. The median follow up of the cohort is 61,3 months (1,2-113,7). The results showed that 95% of patients engrafted. Five patients did not engraft (4 in the BM group and 1 in the PBSC group). Acute GvHD grade II to IV and grade III/IV occurred in 47% and 19% of patients, respectively. The risk of developing chronic GvHD was 49% at 2 years. Overall survival (OS) was 36% at five years. The median disease free survival (DFS) was 55 months among the 36 patients alive. We performed univariate and multivariate analysis of factors susceptible to impact on GvHD and survival. The multivariate analysis included the impact of HLA mismatch, disease status, diagnosis, source of stem cells, patient's and donor's ages. This multivariate analysis performed on the global population shows a trend towards an improved OS with the use of BM instead of PBSC. However, when focusing the multivariate analysis on the 71 patients transplanted with a 10/10 match donor, the most potent factor influencing the outcome is the use of BM which is associated with an improved OS (p=0.03) and DFS (p=0.02), less acute GvHD grade II-IV (p=0.05), or grade III/IV (p=0.05) and less chronic GvHD (p=0.05). These results suggest that the use of BM as the source of stem cells should be reconsidered in the context of matched UD after RIC transplantation. Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


Blood ◽  
2012 ◽  
Vol 120 (21) ◽  
pp. 1924-1924
Author(s):  
Raya Mawad ◽  
Ted A. Gooley ◽  
Joseph G Rajendran ◽  
Darrell R. Fisher ◽  
Ajay K. Gopal ◽  
...  

Abstract Abstract 1924 Innovative therapeutic approaches are needed to reduce the morbidity and high relapse rates in patients with advanced AML or high-risk MDS following myeloablative hematopoietic cell transplantation (HCT). Success with stable donor chimerism and low toxicity following infusion of allogeneic peripheral blood stem cells (PBSC) with reduced-intensity regimens affords an opportunity to induce a graft-versus-leukemia (GVL) effect with minimal acute morbidity. GVL effects, however, appear to be most potent in patients with low tumor burden at the time of HCT. In an attempt to improve outcomes, we previously transplanted 58 patients older than age 50 with advanced AML (beyond first remission) or high-risk MDS (≥5% marrow blasts at the time of HCT) in a Phase I trial using 131I-labeled anti-CD45 antibody (BC8) in conjunction with fludarabine (FLU) and 2Gy total-body irradiation (TBI). Data from this study suggested that 131I-anti-CD45-targeted radiotherapy could be safely integrated into a reduced-intensity conditioning regimen for older, high-risk patients with AML or MDS yielding encouraging survival outcomes. These results prompted us to evaluate a similar strategy in younger patients (ages 16–50) with advanced AML or high-risk MDS who may not be able to receive a high dose HCT conditioning regimen. In this phase I dose–escalation trial 14 patients received a dose of 131I-BC8 that delivered 10–27 Gy of targeted radiation to the healthy organ receiving the highest dose combined with FLU (30 mg/m2 daily for 3 days), 2 Gy TBI, and HLA-matched related (n = 7) or unrelated (n = 7) PBSC grafts. Graft-versus-host disease (GVHD) prophylaxis consisted of cyclosporine and mycophenolate mofetil. The 131I radiation dose was escalated until the maximum planned dose of 28 Gy was reached without any appreciable dose limiting toxicity. The median patient age was 39.5 (range, 23.8–49.7) years. Thirteen patients had AML, with 9 patients in second complete remission, 3 with primary refractory disease, and 1 in active relapse. One patient had advanced CMML with >5% blasts. Treatment with the 131I-BC8 Ab/FLU/TBI regimen produced a complete remission in 7 patients (50%), and 11 of the 12 evaluable patients had 100% donor CD3+ and CD33+cell engraftment by day 28 after HCT; an additional patient had 79% CD3 and 82% CD33 positive donor marrow cells at day 28. The absolute neutrophil count surpassed 500/μL at a median of 15 (range, 13–22) days. Self-sustained platelet levels of 20,000/μL were reached at a median of 11 (range, 11–27) days after HCT. Five patients (36%) are surviving relapse-free 46 to 99 months (median 87 months) after HCT. Seven patients (50%) have died, with five patients relapsing 0.9 to 45 months after HCT. No non-relapse mortality occured by day 100; however, two patients died 14 and 18 months after HCT of cardiomyopathy and GVHD complications, respectively. This study demonstrates that, in addition to a standard reduced intensity conditioning regimen, an average of 27 Gy of targeted 131I radiotherapy can be delivered to bone marrow, an average of 20Gy to the liver, and an average of 84 Gy to the spleen without a marked increase in day 100 mortality for younger patients. This strategy may thus provide a reasonable alternative for patients with high-risk AML/MDS who may not be able to tolerate a high dose conditioning HCT. Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


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