Can Posttransplant Cyclophosphamide Reduce the Risk of Graft-Versus-Host Disease for Pediatric Fully Matched Nonrelated Stem Cell Transplant?
- PMID: 41255118
- DOI: 10.6002/ect.2024.0322
Can Posttransplant Cyclophosphamide Reduce the Risk of Graft-Versus-Host Disease for Pediatric Fully Matched Nonrelated Stem Cell Transplant?
Abstract
Objectives: Allogeneic stem cell transplant is the only curative strategy for a variety of pediatric malignant/nonmalignant diseases. The introduction of posttransplant cyclophosphamide therapy as prophylaxis for graft-versus-host disease in haploi-dentical bone marrow transplant setting has been a game changer and is also being investigated for its benefits in matched hematopoietic stem cell transplants. The effect of posttransplant cyclophosphamide therapy for prophylaxis of graft-versus-host disease for fully matched hematopoietic stem cell transplants remains unclear for pediatric patients. As a part of conditioning regimen, antithymocyte globulin allows in vivo T-cell depletion for graft-versus-host disease prophylaxis and is known to reduce graft-versus-host disease incidence without increasing relapse. We investigated whether posttransplant cyclophosphamide therapy has an additive effect with antithymocyte globulin to reduce acute graft-versus-host disease and chronic graft-versus-host disease in pediatric cases of peripheral blood stem cell transplant.
Materials and methods: We conducted a retrospective clinical study of 110 pediatric patients who underwent pediatric blood stem cell transplant from matched unrelated donors. Fifty randomly selected patients received 50 mg/kg/d cyclophosphamide on post-transplant days 3 and 4 (group 1); the remaining 60 patients (group 2) did not receive cyclophosphamide. All patients were given a regimen of standard immunosuppression as graft-versus-host disease prophylaxis.
Results: Patients were followed for a median of 2 years. The incidence of grade 2-4 and grade 3-4 acute graft-versus-host disease was 28% and 18%, respectively, in group 2, and 20% and 10%, respectively, in group 1. The incidence of chronic graft-versus-host disease was 8.3% in group 2 and 4% in group 1. Differences between groups were not significant.
Conclusions: Our findings suggested no effect of post-transplant cyclophosphamide therapy for pediatric patients undergoing blood stem cell transplant with matched unrelated donors. Larger studies are needed to investigate the reasons for differences between pediatric and adult patients.
MeSH terms
Substances
LinkOut - more resources
Full Text Sources
Medical