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Benchmarking of survival outcomes following Haematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation (HSCT): an update of the ongoing project of the European Society for Blood and Marrow Transplantation (EBMT) and Joint Accreditation Committee of ISCT and EBMT (JACIE)
Saccardi, R., Putter, H., Eikema, D. J., Busto, M. P., McGrath, E., Middelkoop, B., Adams, G., Atlija, M., Ayuk, F. A., Baldomero, H., et al
Bone marrow transplantation. 2023;:1-8
Abstract
From 2016 EBMT and JACIE developed an international risk-adapted benchmarking program of haematopoietic stem cell transplant (HSCT) outcome to provide individual EBMT Centers with a means of quality-assuring the HSCT process and meeting FACT-JACIE accreditation requirements relating to 1-year survival outcomes. Informed by previous experience from Europe, North America and Australasia, the Clinical Outcomes Group (COG) established criteria for patient and Center selection, and a set of key clinical variables within a dedicated statistical model adapted to the capabilities of the EBMT Registry. The first phase of the project was launched in 2019 to test the acceptability of the benchmarking model through assessment of Centers' performance for 1-year data completeness and survival outcomes of autologous and allogeneic HSCT covering 2013-2016. A second phase was delivered in July 2021 covering 2015-2019 and including survival outcomes. Reports of individual Center performance were shared directly with local principal investigators and their responses were assimilated. The experience thus far has supported the feasibility, acceptability and reliability of the system as well as identifying its limitations. We provide a summary of experience and learning so far in this 'work in progress', as well as highlighting future challenges of delivering a modern, robust, data-complete, risk-adapted benchmarking program across new EBMT Registry systems.
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Long-term immunity against tetanus and diphtheria after vaccination of allogeneic stem cell transplant recipients
Einarsdottir, S., Sverrisdottir, I., Vaht, K., Bergström, T., Brune, M., Andersson, P. O., Wenneras, C., Ljungman, P.
Transplantation and cellular therapy. 2023
Abstract
BACKGROUND Revaccination against tetanus and diphtheria after allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplant (HCT) is usually effective, but the duration of the immunity is unknown. OBJECTIVE To study humoral immunity to tetanus and diphtheria in long-term survivors and to provide knowledge regarding the need for boosters. STUDY DESIGN The median time from transplantation to blood sampling was 14 years (min-max: 8-40). All patients had received at least 3 doses of vaccines, against both tetanus and diphtheria, either monovalent or combination vaccines containing a full dose of the diphtheria toxoid component (D). In addition, one or more booster doses were administered to 21/146 (14 %) of the patients. Enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays (ELISA) were used where levels below <0.1 IU/mL for diphtheria and <0.01 IU/mL for tetanus were considered "low" or "seronegative". Values between 0.01-0.5 IU/mL for tetanus and 0.1-1.0 IU/mL for diphtheria were considered to represent "partial protection" and levels above 0.5 and 1.0 IU/mL, respectively were considered "high" and protective. RESULTS In all, 39% were seronegative against diphtheria, 52% had "some protection" and 9% had a high titer. In contrast, no patient had become seronegative to tetanus, 32% had "partial protection" against tetanus and 68% had a high titer. In multivariate analysis active Graft-versus-host-disease (GvHD), gender or time from sampling did not affect the probability of becoming seronegative or seropositive. Younger age was associated with lower antibody levels to tetanus toxoid, but age was not correlated with antibody levels against diphtheria toxoid. CONCLUSION Tetanus immunity was maintained after vaccination in most long-term survivors, but immunity against diphtheria was poor and boosters should be considered.
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A phase 3 randomized, double-blind, comparator-controlled study to evaluate safety, tolerability and immunogenicity of V114, a 15-valent pneumococcal conjugate vaccine, in allogeneic hematopoietic cell transplant recipients (PNEU-STEM)
Wilck, M., Cornely, O. A., Cordonnier, C., Velez, J. D., Ljungman, P., Maertens, J., Selleslag, D., Mullane, K. M., Nabhan, S., Chen, Q., et al
Clinical infectious diseases : an official publication of the Infectious Diseases Society of America. 2023
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Editor's Choice
Abstract
BACKGROUND Individuals who receive allogeneic hematopoietic cell transplant (allo-HCT) are immunocompromised and at high risk for pneumococcal infections, especially in the months following transplant. This study evaluated the safety and immunogenicity of V114 (VAXNEUVANCE™), a 15-valent pneumococcal conjugate vaccine (PCV), when given to allo-HCT recipients. METHODS Participants received 3 doses of V114 or PCV13 in one-month intervals starting 3-6 months after allo-HCT. Twelve months after HCT, participants received either PNEUMOVAXTM 23 or a fourth dose of PCV (if they experienced chronic graft versus host disease). Safety was evaluated as the proportion of participants with adverse events (AEs). Immunogenicity was evaluated by measuring serotype-specific immunoglobulin G (IgG) geometric mean concentrations (GMCs) and opsonophagocytic activity (OPA) geometric mean titers (GMTs) for all V114 serotypes in each vaccination group. RESULTS A total of 274 participants were enrolled and vaccinated in the study. The proportions of participants with AEs and serious AEs were generally comparable between intervention groups, and the majority of AEs in both groups were of short duration and mild-to-moderate intensity. For both IgG GMCs and OPA GMTs, V114 was generally comparable to PCV13 for the 13 shared serotypes, and higher for serotypes 22F and 33F at Day 90. CONCLUSIONS V114 was well tolerated in allo-HCT recipients with a generally comparable safety profile to PCV13. V114 induced comparable immune responses to PCV13 for the 13 shared serotypes, and higher for V114 serotypes 22F and 33F. Study results support use of V114 in allo-HCT recipients.
PICO Summary
Population
Adults and children who received allo-HCT 90 to 180 days prior to randomization, from 44 centres in 10 countries (n=274)
Intervention
3 doses of V114 pneumococcal conjugate vaccine in one-month intervals starting 3-6 months after transplant. For people who experienced chronic GvHD, a fourth dose of PNEUMOVAXTM 23 was given (n=139)
Comparison
Three doses of PCV13 in pneumococcal conjugate vaccine in one-month intervals starting 3-6 months after transplant. For people who experienced chronic GvHD, a fourth dose was given. (n=135)
Outcome
The proportions of participants with AEs and serious AEs were generally comparable between intervention groups, and the majority of AEs in both groups were of short duration and mild-to-moderate intensity. For both IgG GMCs and OPA GMTs, V114 was generally comparable to PCV13 for the 13 shared serotypes, and higher for serotypes 22F and 33F at Day 90.
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Outcomes for patients with EBV-positive PTLD post-allogeneic HCT after failure of rituximab-containing therapy
Socié, G., Barba, P., Barlev, A., Sanz, J., García-Cadenas, I., Chevallier, P., Fagioli, F., Guzman-Becerra, N., Kumar, D., Ljungman, P., et al
Bone marrow transplantation. 2023
Abstract
Epstein-Barr virus-positive (EBV(+)) post-transplant lymphoproliferative disease (PTLD) is an ultra-rare and aggressive condition that may occur following allogeneic hematopoietic cell transplant (HCT) due to immunosuppression. Approximately half of EBV(+) PTLD cases are relapsed or refractory (R/R) to initial rituximab-containing therapy. There are limited treatment options and no standard of care for patients with R/R EBV(+) PTLD, and little is known about their treatment history and outcomes. We performed a multinational, multicenter, retrospective chart review of patients with R/R EBV(+) PTLD following HCT to describe patients' demographic and disease characteristics, treatment history, and overall survival (OS) from rituximab failure. Among 81 patients who received initial treatment with rituximab as monotherapy (84.0%) or in combination with chemotherapy (16.0%), median time from HCT to PTLD diagnosis was 3.0 months and median OS was 0.7 months. Thirty-six patients received a subsequent line of treatment. The most frequent causes of death were PTLD (56.8%), graft-versus-host disease (13.5%) and treatment-related mortality (10.8%). In multivariate analysis, early PTLD onset and lack of response to initial treatment were associated with mortality. This real-world study demonstrates that the prognosis of patients with R/R EBV(+) PTLD following HCT remains poor, highlighting the urgent unmet medical need in this population.
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Impact of Baseline and Week 2 and Week 4 Posttransplant CMV Cell-Mediated Immunity on Risk of CMV Infections and Mortality in Recipients of Allogeneic Hematopoietic Cell Transplant
Ariza-Heredia, E. J., Winston, D. J., Rowley, S. D., Mullane, K., Chandrasekar, P., Hari, P., Avery, R. K., Peggs, K. S., Kumar, D., Nath, R., et al
Open forum infectious diseases. 2023;10(8):ofad386
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Abstract
BACKGROUND Cytomegalovirus (CMV) infection is a common opportunistic infection after allogeneic hematopoietic cell transplant (alloHCT). We explored whether a change in CMV cell-mediated immunity during the first month after transplant predicts the risk of development of CMV infection and all-cause mortality. METHODS This follow-up analysis is based on data from the REACT study, a multicenter prospective observational study of recipients of alloHCT who were CMV-seropositive. Production of interferon γ following ex vivo stimulation with CMV antigens IE1 (immediate early 1) and pp65 (phosphoprotein 65) was assessed by CMV ELISPOT assay at baseline and 2 and 4 weeks after transplant. Clinically significant CMV infection (CS-CMVi) was defined as CMV viremia and/or disease necessitating antiviral therapy. We evaluated the impact of CMV CMI changes on the risk of CS-CMVi and post transplant mortality. RESULTS The analysis included 226 recipients of alloHCT with CMV cell-mediated immunity data at baseline and 2 and/or 4 weeks after transplant. CS-CMVi occurred in 64 patients (28%). On Cox regression analyses, independent predictors of CS-CMVi included a negative Δ change from baseline to week 2 of pp65 spot counts (hazard ratio, 3.65 [95% CI, 1.65-8.04]; P = .001) to week 4 of IE1 spot counts (hazard ratio, 2.79 [95% CI, 1.46-5.35]; P = .002), anti-thymocyte globulin conditioning regimen, type of transplant, female sex, and corticosteroid use. Kaplan-Meir analysis showed a significant association of a negative IE1 change from baseline to week 4 and increased all-cause mortality after transplant (log rank test = 0.041). CONCLUSIONS A decrease in CMV-specific T-cell responses during the first month after transplant may predict CS-CMVi and is associated with all-cause mortality in recipients of alloHCT.
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Risk factors for a severe disease course in children with SARS-COV-2 infection following hematopoietic cell transplantation in the pre-Omicron period: a prospective multinational Infectious Disease Working Party from the European Society for Blood and Marrow Transplantation group (EBMT) and the Spanish Group of Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation (GETH) study
Averbuch, D., de la Camara, R., Tridello, G., Knelange, N. S., Bykova, T. A., Ifversen, M., Dobsinska, V., Ayas, M., Hamidieh, A. A., Pichler, H., et al
Bone marrow transplantation. 2023;:1-9
Abstract
Risk factors for severe SARS-Cov-2 infection course are poorly described in children following hematopoietic cell transplantation (HCT). In this international study, we analyzed factors associated with a severe course (intensive care unit (ICU) admission and/or mortality) in post-HCT children. Eighty-nine children (58% male; median age 9 years (min-max 1-18)) who received an allogeneic (85; 96%) or an autologous (4; 4%) HCT were reported from 28 centers (18 countries). Median time from HCT to SARS-Cov-2 infection was 7 months (min-max 0-181). The most common clinical manifestations included fever (37; 42%) and cough (26; 29%); 37 (42%) were asymptomatic. Nine (10%) children following allo-HCT required ICU care. Seven children (8%) following allo-HCT, died at a median of 22 days after SARS-Cov-2 diagnosis. In a univariate analysis, the probability of a severe disease course was higher in allo-HCT children with chronic GVHD, non-malignant disease, immune suppressive treatment (specifically, mycophenolate), moderate immunodeficiency score, low Lansky score, fever, cough, coinfection, pulmonary radiological findings, and high C-reactive protein. In conclusion, SARS-Cov-2 infection in children following HCT was frequently asymptomatic. Despite this, 10% needed ICU admission and 8% died in our cohort. Certain HCT, underlying disease, and SARS-Cov-2 related factors were associated with a severe disease course.
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Update of recommendations for the management of COVID-19 in patients with haematological malignancies, haematopoietic cell transplantation and CAR T therapy, from the 2022 European Conference on Infections in Leukaemia (ECIL 9)
Cesaro, S., Mikulska, M., Hirsch, H. H., Styczynski, J., Meylan, S., Cordonnier, C., Navarro, D., von Lilienfeld-Toal, M., Mehra, V., Marchesi, F., et al
Leukemia. 2023
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Haematopoietic stem cell transplantation for treatment of relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis in Sweden: an observational cohort study
Silfverberg, T., Zjukovskaja, C., Ljungman, P., Nahimi, A., Ahlstrand, E., Dreimane, A., Einarsdottir, S., Fagius, J., Iacobaeus, E., Hägglund, H., et al
Journal of neurology, neurosurgery, and psychiatry. 2023
Abstract
BACKGROUND A growing evidence base supports the use of autologous haematopoietic stem cell transplantation (aHSCT) for treatment of relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis (RRMS), but it has not yet been integrated into most national clinical guidelines. The objective of this study was to assess efficacy and safety when aHSCT is implemented in routine healthcare. METHODS We assessed 231 patients and the final analysis included 174 RRMS patients who were treated with aHSCT in Sweden before 1 January 2020. Efficacy was evaluated by performing a retrospective analysis of prospectively collected data from the Swedish MS registry. Procedure-related safety was assessed by analysing data from electronic patient records covering a period of 100 days following aHSCT. RESULTS With a median follow-up time of 5.5 (IQR: 3.4-7.5) years, the Kaplan-Meier estimate for no evidence of disease activity was 73% (95% CI 66% to 81%) at 5 years and 65% (95% CI 57% to 75%) at 10 years. Out of the 149 patients with baseline disability, 80 (54%) improved, 55 (37%) were stable and 14 (9%) deteriorated. The mean number of adverse events per patient was 1.7 (±SD: 1.5) for grade 3 events and 0.06 (±SD: 0.3) for grade 4 events. Febrile neutropenia was the most common adverse event, affecting 68% of patients. There was no treatment-related mortality. CONCLUSIONS Treatment with aHSCT for RRMS is associated with freedom from disease activity in a majority of patients, with acceptable adverse events. This procedure should be considered a standard of care for patients with highly active RRMS.
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Improved outcomes over time and higher mortality in CMV seropositive allogeneic stem cell transplantation patients with COVID-19; An infectious disease working party study from the European Society for Blood and Marrow Transplantation registry
Ljungman, P., Tridello, G., Piñana, J. L., Ciceri, F., Sengeloev, H., Kulagin, A., Mielke, S., Yegin, Z. A., Collin, M., Einardottir, S., et al
Frontiers in immunology. 2023;14:1125824
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Editor's Choice
Abstract
INTRODUCTION COVID-19 has been associated with high morbidity and mortality in allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplant (allo-HCT) recipients. METHODS This study reports on 986 patients reported to the EBMT registry during the first 29 months of the pandemic. RESULTS The median age was 50.3 years (min - max; 1.0 - 80.7). The median time from most recent HCT to diagnosis of COVID-19 was 20 months (min - max; 0.0 - 383.9). The median time was 19.3 (0.0 - 287.6) months during 2020, 21.2 (0.1 - 324.5) months during 2021, and 19.7 (0.1 - 383.9) months during 2022 (p = NS). 145/986 (14.7%) patients died; 124 (12.6%) due to COVID-19 and 21 of other causes. Only 2/204 (1%) fully vaccinated patients died from COVID-19. There was a successive improvement in overall survival over time. In multivariate analysis, increasing age (p<.0001), worse performance status (p<.0001), contracting COVID-19 within the first 30 days (p<.0001) or 30 - 100 days after HCT (p=.003), ongoing immunosuppression (p=.004), pre-existing lung disease (p=.003), and recipient CMV seropositivity (p=.004) had negative impact on overall survival while patients contracting COVID-19 in 2020 (p<.0001) or 2021 (p=.027) had worse overall survival than patients with COVID-19 diagnosed in 2022. DISCUSSION Although the outcome of COVID-19 has improved, patients having risk factors were still at risk for severe COVID-19 including death.
PICO Summary
Population
Adults and children who tested PCR positive to COVID-19 after previous allogeneic transplant, and were reported to the EBMT registry (n=986)
Intervention
Analysis of the outcome of COVID-19 during important phases of the COVID-19.
Comparison
Patients contracting COVID-19 at different time points of the pandemic were compared
Outcome
The median age was 50.3 years (min - max; 1.0 - 80.7). The median time from most recent HCT to diagnosis of COVID-19 was 20 months (min - max; 0.0 - 383.9). The median time was 19.3 (0.0 - 287.6) months during 2020, 21.2 (0.1 - 324.5) months during 2021, and 19.7 (0.1 - 383.9) months during 2022 (p = NS). 145/986 (14.7%) patients died; 124 (12.6%) due to COVID-19 and 21 of other causes. Only 2/204 (1%) fully vaccinated patients died from COVID-19. There was a successive improvement in overall survival over time. In multivariate analysis, increasing age, worse performance status, contracting COVID-19 within the first 30 days or 30 - 100 days after HCT, ongoing immunosuppression, pre-existing lung disease, and recipient CMV seropositivity had negative impact on overall survival while patients contracting COVID-19 in 2020 or 2021 had worse overall survival than patients with COVID-19 diagnosed in 2022.
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Upper and/or lower respiratory tract infection caused by human metapneumovirus after allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation
Piñana, J. L., Tridello, G., Xhaard, A., Wendel, L., Montoro, J., Vazquez, L., Heras, I., Ljungman, P., Mikulska, M., Salmenniemi, U., et al
The Journal of infectious diseases. 2023
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Abstract
PATIENTS AND METHODS This retrospective multicenter cohort study examined the epidemiology, clinical characteristics, and risk factors for poor outcomes associated with human metapneumovirus (hMPV) infections in recipients of allogeneic stem cell transplantation (allo-HCT). RESULTS We included 428 allo-HCT recipients who developed 438 hMPV infection episodes between January 2012 and January 2019. Most recipients were adults (93%). hMPV infections were diagnosed at a median of 373 days after allo-HCT. The infections were categorized as upper respiratory tract disease (URTD) or lower respiratory tract disease (LRTD), with 60% and 40% of cases, respectively. Patients with hMPV LRTD experienced the infection earlier in the transplant course and had higher rates of lymphopenia, neutropenia, corticosteroid use, and ribavirin therapy. Multivariate analysis identified lymphopenia and corticosteroid use (>30 mg/d) as independent risk factors for LRTD occurrence. The overall mortality at day 30 after hMPV detection was 2% for URTD, 12% for possible LRTD, and 21% for proven LRTD. Lymphopenia was the only independent risk factor associated with day 30 mortality in LRTD cases. CONCLUSIONS These findings highlight the significance of lymphopenia and corticosteroid use in the development and severity of hMPV infections after allo-HCT, with lymphopenia being a predictor of higher mortality in LRTD cases.