scholarly journals Initial therapy of chronic graft vs. host disease: Analysis of practice variation and failure-free survival

Author(s):  
Joseph Pidala ◽  
Lynn Onstad ◽  
Paul J. Martin ◽  
Betty K Hamilton ◽  
Corey S Cutler ◽  
...  

Prior clinical trials largely considered prednisone 1mg/kg/day with or without calcineurin inhibitor as standard initial therapy for chronic graft vs. host disease (cGVHD) but uncertainty remains regarding the extent of practice variation and whether this affects subsequent outcomes. We assembled a cohort of 745 cGVHD patients treated with initial systemic immune suppressive (IS) therapy from three prior Chronic GVHD Consortium observational studies. Initial therapy was defined as first IS therapy started for cGVHD or prednisone increased to ≥ 0.4mg/kg/day from lower doses within 30 days before cGVHD diagnosis to any time afterward. Initial therapies were non-prednisone IS therapies (n=137, 18%), prednisone alone (n=411, 55%), or prednisone plus other IS therapy (n=197, 26%). In multivariate analysis, initial therapy group was not associated with FFS (failure-free survival, a composite of death, relapse, new IS therapy), overall survival (OS) or non-relapse mortality (NRM). Among the prednisone-based approaches, steroid dose (mg/kg/day) was <0.25 (9%), 0.25-0.74 (36%), 0.75-1.25 (42%), or >1.25 (13%). Prednisone dose within the steroid-treated patients was not significantly associated with FFS, OS, or NRM. No significant interactions were detected between overall cGVHD severity and either initial therapy group or prednisone dose for the outcomes of FFS, OS, or NRM. These observational data document heterogeneity in more contemporary cGVHD initial treatment practices, including prednisone dose and use of non-steroid approaches. This variation was not associated with FFS, OS, or NRM. Prospective trials are needed to verify efficacy of reduced-dose prednisone or prednisone-free initial therapy approaches.

2021 ◽  
Vol 27 (3) ◽  
pp. S275-S276
Author(s):  
Joseph A. Pidala ◽  
Lynn Onstad ◽  
Paul J. Martin ◽  
Betty K. Hamilton ◽  
Corey Cutler ◽  
...  

1984 ◽  
Vol 159 (2) ◽  
pp. 508-523 ◽  
Author(s):  
S T Pals ◽  
H Gleichmann ◽  
E Gleichmann

We studied the alloreactive properties of donor T cells obtained from F1 mice that had recovered from the allosuppression of acute graft-vs.-host disease (GVHD) and showed mild symptoms of chronic GVHD, i.e., so-called secondary chronic GVHD. To this end, we used (B10 x DBA/2)F1 mice that had been injected with 10(8) B10 spleen cells 100-150 d previously. Such GVHD F1 mice were repopulated by lympho-hematopoietic cells of donor (B10) origin, which exhibited split tolerance towards the host: Whereas F1-specific donor T helper (Th) cells as well as T cells proliferating in the mixed lymphocyte reaction were readily demonstrable, F1-specific T suppressor (Ts) and T killer (Tk) cells were not, or were hardly, detectable; responses against third-party alloantigens were normal. Upon adoptive transfer to nonirradiated secondary recipients, the B10 cells obtained from the repopulated GVH F1 mice induced F1-specific enlargement of the draining popliteal lymph node and enhancement of the IgG formation therein. B10 cells of the same kind were unable, however, to induce lethal GVHD upon transfer to 950 rad-irradiated secondary (B10 x DBA/2)F1 recipients. We conclude that alloactivated donor Ts/Tk cells disappear from the host at a relatively early stage of GVHD, i.e., at the end of acute GVHD , presumably because they are short-lived. By contrast, the longevity of alloactivated donor Th cells causes the symptoms of secondary chronic GVHD.


2019 ◽  
Vol 25 (3) ◽  
pp. S28 ◽  
Author(s):  
Joseph A. Pidala ◽  
Vijaya Raj Bhatt ◽  
Betty K. Hamilton ◽  
Iskra Pusic ◽  
William A. Wood ◽  
...  

Blood ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 138 (Supplement 1) ◽  
pp. 3905-3905
Author(s):  
Jennifer White ◽  
Mohamed Elemary ◽  
Swe Mar Linn ◽  
Igor Novitzky-Basso ◽  
Anargyros Xenocostas ◽  
...  

Abstract Background The REACH3 trial evaluating Ruxolitinib (RUX) treatment for steroid-refractory chronic GVHD concluded that RUX leads to significantly greater overall response and failure-free survival (FFS) than best available therapies (NEJM 2021). We reported a real-world experience of RUX in 47 chronic GVHD (cGVHD) patients, with 36% overall response rate (ORR) at 6 months (ASH 2020). The present study expanded this to 115 pts, evaluating ORR, FFS and overall survival (OS), and explored prognostic factors associated with clinical outcomes. Patients and methods A total of 115 patients treated with RUX for cGVHD from 2016 to 2021 at 5 sites were evaluated retrospectively. Patients and disease characteristics are as follows: median age 57.5 years; males 67 (60%); organ involvement at the time of RUX: skin 75.7%, mouth 51.3%, eye 42.6%, gastrointestinal 19.1%, liver 39.1%, lung 31.3%, and musculoskeletal 38.3%. Out of 108 pts with available HCT-CI prior to HCT, 29 pts (26.9%) had HCT-CI score 3 or higher, while 79 (73.1%) had HCT-CI score 0-2. The ORR were assessed at months 3, 6 and 12, retrospectively. Treatment failure was defined as 1) resistance requiring treatment switch, 2) non-relapse mortality (NRM), 3) relapse, 4) intolerance to treatment. FFS and OS were calculated from the day of starting RUX therapy for cGVHD treatment. For risk factor analysis, logistic regression was adopted for ORR at 6 months, while Cox's proportional hazard model was implemented for FFS and OS at 12 months. The following variables were evaluated for risk factor analysis: GVHD-related factors (cGVHD severity, no. of organ involvement, prednisone dose or RUX dose at start, previous history of acute GVHD); host factors (age or performance status at RUX starts, sex, HCT-CI comorbidity score pre-HCT); transplant factors (conditioning intensity; donor type, HLA match, T-cell depletion). From those variables identified as significant in the multivariate analysis, a prognostic risk score was generated as the sum of adverse risk factor scores. Results A total of 115 pts had severe (n=69, 60%) or moderate grade (n=44, 38.3%) cGVHD except 2 (1.7%) who had mild grade cGVHD with high-risk features. The median number of organ involvement was 3 (range 1-7). 96 pts (84.2%) received RUX as 4 th line or beyond for cGVHD treatment. The previous treatments included mycophenolate mofetil (n=46, 40.0%), extracorporeal photopheres (n=45, 39.1%), Imatinib (n=13, 11.3%), and Ibrutinib (n=9, 7.8%). RUX was started at 10-20 mg daily as the initial dose, then maintained at 20mg daily in two divided doses on months 3, 6 and 12. With a median follow-up duration of 12 months, ORR was attained in 46.8%, 61.8% and 62.3% at 3, 6 and 12 months, similar to 49.7% ORR rate at 6 months in the REACH3 study. ORR in the range of 48.1-64.5% at 6 months was observed across all the organs involved. No difference in ORR was noted between steroid-resistant vs steroid-dependent cGVHD, or according to previous treatment with TKI drug for GVHD. For ORR, severe grade cGVHD showed a lower ORR rate at 46.8% at 6 months compared to those with moderate/mild grade cGVHD at 81.1% (p=0.001). In terms of prednisone dose reduction, by 12 months, more than half of pts (63.8%) could taper prednisone doses below 0.1mg/kg/day, while the proportion of pts on prednisone dose below 0.1mg/kg/day was 14.83%, 33.6%, 47.6%, and 63.8% at month 0, 3, 6 and 12, respectively. A total of 39 failures (33.4%) were noted, including resistance requiring switch to other therapy (n=17), NRM (n=14), relapse of primary disease (n=3) and intolerance (n=5). The FFS rate in the overall population was 64.6% (54.1-73.2), while the OS rate was 83.3% (74.4-89.4%) at 12 months. For FFS, two risk factors were identified for FFS (Figure): 1) Severe grade cGVHD at RUX start (p=0.008, HR 2.496 [1.229-5.072]); 2) HCT-CI comorbidity 3 or higher (p=0.001, HR 2.802 [1.493-5.259]). When a risk score model was generated, it stratified pts according to the FFS at 12 months (p=0.0001): 85.8% in score 0 (n=32); 58.7% in score 1 (n=57); and 36.8% in score 2 (n=19). Conclusion: Updated results confirm that RUX is an effective treatment option for cGVHD pts, even including heavily treated pts. Also, favorable response was observed across all organs involved with GVHD. Failure of RUX is associated with cGVHD severity and HCT-CI score. Figure 1 Figure 1. Disclosures White: Novartis: Honoraria. Elemary: Jazz, BMS, Abbvie, Novartis, Pfiz: Membership on an entity's Board of Directors or advisory committees; Pfizer, Janssen: Membership on an entity's Board of Directors or advisory committees. Hamad: Novartis: Membership on an entity's Board of Directors or advisory committees, Speakers Bureau. Law: Novartis: Consultancy; Actinium Pharmaceuticals: Research Funding. Mattsson: MattssonAB medical: Current Employment, Current holder of individual stocks in a privately-held company. Kim: Novartis: Consultancy, Honoraria, Research Funding; Pfizer: Honoraria; Paladin: Consultancy, Honoraria, Research Funding; Bristol-Meier Squibb: Research Funding. OffLabel Disclosure: This presentation discusses the use of ruxolitinib for chronic GVHD. This indication is under FDA review.


2013 ◽  
Vol 3 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Yoko Ogawa ◽  
Stella K. Kim ◽  
Reza Dana ◽  
Janine Clayton ◽  
Sandeep Jain ◽  
...  

1997 ◽  
Vol 8 (2) ◽  
pp. 201-216 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sook-Bin Woo ◽  
Stephanie Joi Lee ◽  
Mark M. Schubert

Bone marrow transplantation (BMT) is the treatment of choice for many leukemias, lymphomas, bone marrow failure syndromes, and immundeficiency disorders, and is the primary and salvage therapy for many solid malignancies. With the establishment of national and international marrow banks, unrelated allogeneic BMT is being performed with increasing frequency. Graft-vs.-host disease (GVHD) remains a major complication of allogeneic BMT, occurring in 25% to 70% of patients despite GVHD prophylaxis, with the skin, gastro-intestinal tract, and liver as primary target organs. Oral findings are seen in both acute and chronic GVHD. In acute GVHD, the oral lesions are often painful, erythematous, ulcerative, and desquamative. In chronic GVHD, they are lichenoid with associated erythema and ulcerations; additionally, they may be associated with a sicca syndrome characterized by xerostomia and progressive salivary gland atrophy. General principles of BMT are discussed, as are systemic and local therapeutic options for oral GVHD.


Blood ◽  
2001 ◽  
Vol 98 (13) ◽  
pp. 3868-3870 ◽  
Author(s):  
Emin Kansu ◽  
Ted Gooley ◽  
Mary E. D. Flowers ◽  
Claudio Anasetti ◽  
H. Joachim Deeg ◽  
...  

Abstract This study compared the incidence of clinical extensive chronic graft-versus-host disease (GVHD), transplantation-related mortality, survival, and relapse-free survival among recipients randomly assigned to receive a 24-month or a 6-month course of cyclosporine prophylaxis after transplantation of allogeneic marrow from an HLA-identical sibling or alternative donor. Patients who did not have clinical manifestations of chronic GVHD on day 80 after transplantation were eligible for the study if they previously had acute GVHD or if a skin biopsy showed histologic evidence of chronic GVHD. Clinical extensive chronic GVHD developed in 35 of the 89 patients (39%) in the 24-month group and 37 of the 73 patients (51%) in the 6-month group. The hazard of developing chronic GVHD was not significantly different in the 2 groups (hazard ratio = 0.76; 95% confidence interval, 0.48-1.21; P = .25). In addition, there were no significant differences between the 2 groups in transplantation-related mortality, survival, or disease-free survival.


Author(s):  
Aleksandr Lazaryan ◽  
Stephanie J Lee ◽  
Mukta Arora ◽  
Jongphil Kim ◽  
Brian C Betts ◽  
...  

Standard initial therapy of chronic graft vs. host disease (cGVHD) with glucocorticoids results in suboptimal and transient responses in a significant number of patients. Safety and feasibility of anti-CD20 directed B-cell therapy with ofatumumab (1000 mg IV on days 0 and 14) and prednisone (1 mg/kg/day) was previously established in our phase I trial (n=12). We now report the mature results of the phase II expansion of the trial (n=38). The overall NIH severity of cGVHD was moderate (63%) or severe (37%) with 74% of all patients affected by the overlap subtype of cGVHD and 82% by prior acute cGVHD. The combined therapy was generally well tolerated, with some anticipated infusion reactions to ofatumumab, and common toxicities of glucocorticoids. Total B-cell depletion following therapy was profound, with marginal recovery within first 12 months from initial therapy. The observed 6 month clinician-reported and 2014 NIH-defined overall response rates (ORR=complete + partial response[CR/PR]) of 62.5% (1-sided lower 90% confidence interval=51.5%) were not superior to pre-specified historic benchmark of 60%. Post-hoc comparison of 6 month NIH response suggested benefit compared to more contemporaneous NIH-based benchmark of 48.6% with frontline sirolimus/prednisone (CTN 0801 trial). Baseline cGVHD features (organ involvement, severity, initial IS agents) were not significantly associated with 6-month ORR. The median time to initiation of second-line therapy was 5.4 months (range 0.9-15.1 months). Failure-free survival (FFS) was 64.2% (95% CI 46.5-77.4%) at 6 months and 53.1% (95% CI 35.8-67.7%) at 12 months, whereas FFS with CR/PR at 12 months of 33.5% exceeded a benchmark of 15% in post-hoc analysis, and was associated with greater success in steroid discontinuation by 24 months (odds ratio 8 (95% CI 1.21-52.7). This single-arm phase II trial demonstrated acceptable safety and potential efficacy of the upfront use of ofatumumab in combination with prednisone in cGVHD. This trial is registered at www.clinicaltrials.gov as NCT01680965.


Blood ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 124 (8) ◽  
pp. 1363-1371 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yoshihiro Inamoto ◽  
Mary E. D. Flowers ◽  
Brenda M. Sandmaier ◽  
Sahika Z. Aki ◽  
Paul A. Carpenter ◽  
...  

Key Points Failure-free survival is a potentially useful, efficient, and robust basis for interpreting results of initial treatment of chronic GVHD.


Blood ◽  
2004 ◽  
Vol 104 (11) ◽  
pp. 3059-3059
Author(s):  
Britt Anderson ◽  
Jennifer McNiff ◽  
Dhanpat Jain ◽  
Bruce R. Blazar ◽  
Warren D. Shlomchik ◽  
...  

Abstract The application of allogeneic stem cell transplantation is limited by graft-vs.-host disease (GVHD). GVHD can be divided into acute and chronic forms that likely have different initiation requirements and pathogenic mechanisms. Previously we demonstrated that residual host antigen presenting cells (APC) were required for CD8-mediated acute GVHD (aGVHD). In contrast, here we show that either donor or host APCs can initiate CD4-mediated GVHD in the B10.D2(H-2d)→BALB/c (H-2d) model of chronic GVHD (cGVHD). We selectively impaired donor APCs, host APCs or both by using donors and/or hosts deficient in both costimulatory molecules CD80 and CD86 (CD80/86−/−). When all CD28:CD80/86 signaling was prevented by using CD80/86−/− donors and hosts, wild type (WT) CD4 cells were unable to induce cGVHD. Therefore donor CD4 cells absolutely require signals from CD80/86 to mediate cGVHD. Next we compared cGVHD in CD80/86−/− BM + CD4→WT vs. WT BM + CD4→CD80/86−/− hosts, to debilitate antigen presentation by donor or host APCs, respectively. Cutaneous cGVHD developed in both groups, demonstrating that donor or recipient APCs are sufficient to initiate disease. However, the incidence of cutaneous cGVHD in CD80/86−/− recipients was less than that in WT→WT recipients (P<0.01), suggesting that recipient APCs are more important than donor APCs for skin cGVHD. In support of this, cGVHD was not reduced inCD80/86−/− BM + CD4 →WT recipients. Therefore, reconstitution with defective donor APCs does not affect disease when host APCs are intact. To address whether host APCs were dispensable, we compared cGVHD in donor→host (APCs >98% donor) and host→host chimeric recipients. Similar cGVHD developed in both chimeras; thus donor APCs alone are sufficient, consistent with the data in CD80/86−/− hosts. Interestingly, cGVHD was initiated in the absence of significant host hematopoietic antigen. Thus, exogenously acquired parenchymal antigen was sufficient. The above experiments focused on cutaneous GVHD. However, recipients of WT BM versus non-WT BM consistently developed diarrhea and increased weight loss. While CD4 recipients of CD80/86−/− or CD40−/− BM regained and maintained their original weights, CD4 recipients of WT BM never returned to their pre-transplant weight (P<0.01 after day 15). Consistent with the clinical finding, recipients of CD4 cells and WT BM had higher bowel pathology scores than equivalent mice that received CD80/86−/− BM (P<0.01). Recipients of CD80/86−/− BM + WT CD4 cells had statistically indistinguishable path scores from recipients of either type of BM without CD4 cells (P=0.19 and 0.73); therefore, without CD80/86 expression on donor BM, there was no statistical evidence that donor T cells caused bowel GVHD. These results provide new insights into the role of donor APCs in GVHD and demonstrate that APC requirements differ depending on the site of disease, both novel findings. They also identify differences in APC requirements between CD8-mediated aGVHD and CD4-mediated cGVHD and further highlight APCs as additional targets for GVHD prevention and therapy.


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