Marrow transplantation from unrelated donors for patients with severe aplastic anemia who have failed immunosuppressive therapy Journal Article


Authors: Deeg, H. J.; Seidel, K.; Casper, J.; Anasetti, C.; Davies, S.; Gajewski, J. L.; Territo, M.; Ramsay, N.; Harris, R. E.; Castro-Malaspina, H.; Collins, R.; Champlin, R.; Schoch, G.; King, R.; Howe, C.
Article Title: Marrow transplantation from unrelated donors for patients with severe aplastic anemia who have failed immunosuppressive therapy
Abstract: Allogeneic marrow transplantation offers curative therapy for patients with aplastic anemia. We analyzed retrospective results in 141 patients with severe aplastic anemia who received transplants between 1988 and 1995 from an unrelated volunteer donor identified through the National Marrow Donor Program (NMDP). All patients had failed one or more courses of immunosuppressive therapy. Of the patients, 121 (86%) received a radiation-containing conditioning regimen, and 20 (14%) were given chemotherapy only. Based on serologic human leukocyte antigen (HLA) typing (class I and II), 105 patients (74%) received HLA-matched marrow, and 36 (26%) received marrow mismatched for at least one HLA-A, -B, or -DR antigen. Allele-level (molecular) typing for HLA-DRB1 was available in 108 donor-recipient pairs; 77 patients received DRB1-matched and 31 DRB1-mismatched transplants. All but 13% of patients were given a cyclosporine-containing regimen for graft-vs.-host disease (GVHD) prophylaxis, and 45 patients (32%) received marrow that was T cell-depleted. Among 131 evaluable patients, 116 (89%) achieved sustained engraftment and 15 (11%) did not. Among patients with engraftment, acute GVHD of grades II-IV developed in 60 patients (52%) and extensive chronic GVHD in 24 patients at risk (31%). Currently, 51 patients (36%) are surviving at 11-94 months (median 36) after transplantation. All but five have Karnofsky scores ≥80. Patients who received a serologically matched transplant fared somewhat better than did patients given a serologically mismatched transplant (p = 0.03). Patients with donors matched by both serology and allele-level DRB1 typing had significantly better survival than DRB1-mismatched patients with 56 vs. 15% surviving at 3 years (p = 0.001). Outcome in patients transplanted within 3 years of diagnosis was superior to that among patients transplanted with greater delay. Major causes of death were graft failure, GVHD, and infections. These data suggest that unrelated marrow transplantation offers successful therapy for a proportion of patients who have failed immunosuppressive therapy.
Keywords: adolescent; adult; child; treatment outcome; middle aged; survival rate; transplantation, homologous; clinical trial; mortality; methodology; donor; tissue donors; multicenter study; graft versus host reaction; outcome; immunophenotyping; graft survival; regression analysis; bone marrow transplantation; graft vs host disease; immunosuppressive agents; allotransplantation; immunosuppressive agent; aplastic anemia; unrelated donor; anemia, aplastic; humans; human; male; female; article; drb1 matching
Journal Title: Biology of Blood and Marrow Transplantation
Volume: 5
Issue: 4
ISSN: 1083-8791
Publisher: Elsevier Inc.  
Date Published: 1999-08-01
Start Page: 243
End Page: 252
Language: English
PUBMED: 10465104
PROVIDER: scopus
DOI: 10.1053/bbmt.1999.v5.pm10465104
DOI/URL:
Notes: Article -- Export Date: 16 August 2016 -- Source: Scopus
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