-
1.
Allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation for NK/T-cell lymphoma: an international collaborative analysis
Berning, P., Schmitz, N., Ngoya, M., Finel, H., Boumendil, A., Wang, F., Huang, X. J., Hermine, O., Philippe, L., Couronné, L., et al
Leukemia. 2023;:1-10
Abstract
Natural killer/T-cell lymphomas (NKTCL) represent rare and aggressive lymphoid malignancies. Patients (pts) with relapsed/refractory disease after Asparaginase (ASPA)-based chemotherapy have a dismal prognosis. To better define the role of allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (allo-HSCT), we conducted a retrospective analysis of data shared with the European Society for Blood and Marrow Transplantation (EBMT) and cooperating Asian centers. We identified 135 pts who received allo-HSCT between 2010 and 2020. Median age was 43.4 years at allo-HSCT, 68.1% were male. Ninety-seven pts (71.9 %) were European, 38 pts (28.1%) Asian. High Prognostic Index for NKTCL (PINK) scores were reported for 44.4%; 76.3% had >1 treatment, 20.7% previous auto-HSCT, and 74.1% ASPA-containing regimens prior to allo-HSCT. Most (79.3%) pts were transplanted in CR/PR. With a median follow-up of 4.8 years, 3-year progression-free(PFS) and overall survival were 48.6% (95%-CI:39.5-57%) and 55.6% (95%-CI:46.5-63.8%). Non-relapse mortality at 1 year was 14.8% (95%-CI:9.3-21.5%) and 1-year relapse incidence 29.6% (95%-CI:21.9-37.6%). In multivariate analyses, shorter time interval (0-12 months) between diagnosis and allo-HSCT [HR = 2.12 (95%-CI:1.03-4.34); P = 0.04] and transplantation not in CR/PR [HR = 2.20 (95%-CI:0.98-4.95); P = 0.056] reduced PFS. Programmed cell death protein 1(PD-1/PD-L1) treatment before HSCT neither increased GVHD nor impacted survival. We demonstrate that allo-HSCT can achieve long-term survival in approximately half of pts allografted for NKTCL.
-
2.
Artificial intelligence methods to estimate overall mortality and non-relapse mortality following allogeneic HCT in the modern era: an EBMT-TCWP study
Mussetti, A., Rius-Sansalvador, B., Moreno, V., Peczynski, C., Polge, E., Galimard, J. E., Kröger, N., Blaise, D., Peffault de Latour, R., Kulagin, A., et al
Bone marrow transplantation. 2023
Abstract
Allogeneic haematopoietic cell transplantation (alloHCT) has curative potential counterbalanced by its toxicity. Prognostic scores fail to include current era patients and alternative donors. We examined adult patients from the EBMT registry who underwent alloHCT between 2010 and 2019 for oncohaematological disease. Our primary objective was to develop a new prognostic score for overall mortality (OM), with a secondary objective of predicting non-relapse mortality (NRM) using the OM score. AI techniques were employed. The model for OM was trained, optimized, and validated using 70%, 15%, and 15% of the data set, respectively. The top models, "gradient boosting" for OM (AUC = 0.64) and "elasticnet" for NRM (AUC = 0.62), were selected. The analysis included 33,927 patients. In the final prognostic model, patients with the lowest score had a 2-year OM and NRM of 18 and 13%, respectively, while those with the highest score had a 2-year OM and NRM of 82 and 93%, respectively. The results were consistent in the subset of the haploidentical cohort (n = 4386). Our score effectively stratifies the risk of OM and NRM in the current era but do not significantly improve mortality prediction. Future prognostic scores can benefit from identifying biological or dynamic markers post alloHCT.
-
3.
The outcome of patients with Hodgkin lymphoma and early relapse after autologous stem cell transplant has improved in recent years
Bazarbachi, A., Boumendil, A., Finel, H., Khvedelidze, I., Romejko-Jarosinska, J., Tanase, A., Akhtar, S., Ben Othman, T., Ma'koseh, M., Afanasyev, B., et al
Leukemia. 2022
Abstract
Hodgkin lymphoma (HL) patients who relapse after autologous-stem-cell- transplantation (auto-SCT) have traditionally had a poor prognosis. We analyzed 1781 adult HL patients who relapsed between 2006 and 2017 after a first auto-SCT. The 4-year overall survival (OS) after relapse continuously increased from 32% for patients relapsing in 2006-2008, to 63% for patients relapsing in 2015-2017 (p = 0.001). The improvement over time was predominantly noted in patients who had an early relapse (within 12 months) after auto-SCT (p = 0.01). On multivariate analysis, patients who relapsed in more recent years and those with a longer interval from transplant to relapse had a better OS, whereas increasing age, poor performance status, bulky disease, extranodal disease and presence of B symptoms at relapse were associated with a worse OS. Brentuximab vedotin (BV), checkpoint inhibitors (CPI) and second transplant (SCT2; 86% allogeneic) were used in 233, 91 and 330 patients respectively. The 4-year OS from BV, CPI, and SCT2 use was 55%, 48% and 55% respectively. In conclusion, the outcome after post-transplant relapse has improved significantly in recent years, particularly in the case of early relapse. These large-scale real-world data can serve as benchmark for future studies in this setting.
-
4.
Haploidentical versus matched unrelated donor transplants using post-transplant cyclophosphamide for lymphomas
Mussetti, A., Kanate, A. S., Wang, T., He, M., Hamadani, M., Sr, H. F., Boumendil, A., Sr., Glass, B., Castagna, L., Dominietto, A., et al
Transplantation and cellular therapy. 2022
Abstract
BACKGROUND when using post-transplant cyclophosphamide (PTCy) graft-versus-host-disease (GVHD) prophylaxis for lymphoma patients, it is currently unknown whether a matched unrelated donor (MUD) or a haploidentical related donor is preferable if both are available. OBJECTIVE In this study we wanted to test if using a haploidentical donor has the same results of a MUD. STUDY DESIGN a total of 2140 adults (34% CIBMTR, 66% EBMT registry) aged ≥18 years who received their first haploidentical hematopoietic cell transplant (haplo-HCT) or MUD-HCT (8/8 match at HLA-loci A, B, C, and DRB1) for lymphoma using PTCy-based GVHD prophylaxis from 2010-2019 were retrospectively analyzed. RESULTS The majority of both MUD and haploidentical HCTs received reduced intensity/non-myeloablative conditioning (74% and 77%, respectively), used a peripheral blood stem cell graft (91% and 60%, respectively) and a three-drug GVHD prophylaxis (PTCy + calcineurin inhibitor + MMF in 54% and 90%, respectively). Haploidentical HCT has less favorable results versus MUD cohort in terms of overall mortality (HR=1.69, 95%CI=1.30-2.27, p<0.001), progression-free survival (HR=1.39, 95%CI=1.10 - 1.79, p=0.008), non-relapse mortality (HR=1.93, 95% CI=1.21 - 3.07, p=0.006), platelets engraftment (HR=0.69, 95%CI=0.59 - 0.80, p<0.001), acute grade 2-4 GVHD incidence (HR=1.65, 95%CI=1.28 - 2.14, p<0.001) and chronic GVHD (HR=1.79, 95%CI=1.30 - 2.48, p<0.001). No significant differences were observed in terms of relapse and neutrophil engraftment. Adjusting for propensity score yielded similar results. CONCLUSION whenever MUD is available in a timely manner, it should be preferred over a haploidentical donor when using PTCy-based GVHD prophylaxis for patients with lymphoma.
-
5.
Impact of the SARS-CoV-2 pandemic on hematopoietic cell transplantation and cellular therapies in Europe 2020: a report from the EBMT activity survey
Passweg, J. R., Baldomero, H., Chabannon, C., Corbacioglu, S., de la Cámara, R., Dolstra, H., Glass, B., Greco, R., Mohty, M., Neven, B., et al
Bone marrow transplantation. 2022;:1-11
Abstract
In 2020, 45,364 HCT in 41,016 patients, 18,796 (41%) allogeneic and 26,568 (59%) autologous in 690 centers were reported. Changes observed were as follows: total number of HCT -6.5%, allogeneic HCT -5.1%, autologous HCT -7.5%, and were more pronounced in non-malignant disorders for allogeneic HCT and in autoimmune disease for autologous HCT. Main indications were myeloid malignancies 10,441 (25%), lymphoid malignancies 26,120 (64%) and non-malignant disorders 2532 (6%). A continued growth in CAR-T cellular therapies to 1874 (+65%) patients in 2020 was observed. In allogeneic HCT, the use of haploidentical donors increased while use of unrelated and sibling donors decreased. Cord blood HCT increased by 11.7% for the first time since 2012. There was a significant increase in the use of non-myeloablative but a drop in myeloablative conditioning and in use of marrow as stem cell source. We interpreted these changes as being due to the SARS-CoV-2 pandemic starting early in 2020 in Europe and provided additional data reflecting the varying impact of the pandemic across selected countries and larger cities. The transplant community confronted with the pandemic challenge, continued in providing patients access to treatment. This annual report of the EBMT reflects current activities useful for health care planning.
-
6.
Outcome of Allogeneic Transplantation for Mature T-cell Lymphomas: Impact of Donor Source and Disease Characteristics
Hamadani, M., Ngoya, M., Sureda, A., Bashir, Q., Litovich, C. A., Finel, H., Chen, Y., Boumendil, A., Zain, J., Castagna, L., et al
Blood advances. 2021
Abstract
Mature T-cell lymphomas constitute the most common indication of allogeneic hematopoietic cell transplantation (allo-HCT) in lymphomas. Large studies evaluating contemporary outcomes of allo-HCT in mature T-cell lymphomas, relative to commonly used donor sources are not available. Included in this registry study were adult patients who had undergone allo-HCT for anaplastic large cell lymphoma, angioimmunoblastic T-cell lymphoma (AITL), or peripheral T-cell lymphoma-NOS (PTCL-NOS) between 2008 and 2018. HCT platforms compared were post-transplant cyclophosphamide-based haploidentical (haplo-) HCT, matched sibling donor (MSD) HCT, matched unrelated donor HCT with in-vivo T-cell depletion (MUD TCD+), and MUD HCT without TCD (MUD TCD-). Co-primary endpoints were overall survival (OS) and progression-free survival (PFS); secondary endpoints included non-relapse mortality (NRM), and relapse/progression incidence (RI). 1942 patients were eligible (haplo-HCT 237; MSD 911; MUD-TCD+ 468; MUD TCD- 326). Cohorts were comparable for baseline characteristics except higher proportions of patients with decreased performance status (PS) and marrow graft recipients in the haplo-HCT group. On univariate and multivariate comparisons, OS and PFS, RI, and NRM were not significantly different between haplo-HCT, MSD, MUD-TCD+, and MUD-TCD- cohorts, with 3-year OS and PFS of 60%, 63%, 59%, and 64%; and 50%, 50%, 48%, and 52%, respectively. Significant predictors of inferior OS and PFS on multivariate analysis were active disease status at HCT and decreased PS. AITL was associated with significantly reduced relapse risk and better PFS compared to PTCL-NOS. Allo-HCT can provide durable PFS in patients with mature T-cell lymphoma. Outcomes of haplo-HCT were comparable to that of matched donor allo-HCT.
-
7.
A real-life overview of a hematopoietic cell transplant program throughout a four-year period, including prospective registry, exclusion causes and final donor selection
Parody, R., Sánchez-Ortega, I., Mussetti, A., Patiño, B., Arnan, M., Pomares, H., González-Barca, E., Mercadal, S., Boqué, C., Maluquer, C., et al
Bone marrow transplantation. 2021
Abstract
Traceability of patients who are candidates for Hematopoietic cell transplant (HCT) is crucial to ensure HCT program quality. Continuous knowledge of both a detailed registry from a HCT program and final exclusion causes can contribute to promoting a real-life vision and optimizing patient and donor selection. We analyzed epidemiological data reported in a 4 year-monocentric prospective registry, which included all patients presented as candidates for autologous (Auto) and/or allogeneic (Allo) HCT. A total of 543 patients were considered for HCT: 252 (42.4%) for Allo and 291 (57.6%) for Auto. A total of 98 (38.9%) patients were excluded from AlloHCT due to basal disease progression more commonly (18.2%). Seventy-six (30.2%) patients had an HLA identical sibling, whereas 147 (58.3%) patients had only Haplo. UD research was performed in 106 (42%) cases, significantly more often in myeloid than lymphoid malignancies (57% vs 28.7%, p?0.001) but 61.3% were finally canceled, due to donor or disease causes in 72.4%. With respect to Auto candidates, a total of 60 (20.6%) patients were finally excluded; progression was the most common cause (12%). Currently, Haplo is the most frequent donor type. The high cancellation rate of UD research should be revised to optimize further donor algorithms.
-
8.
Impact of reduced-intensity conditioning regimens on outcomes in diffuse large B-cell lymphoma undergoing allogeneic transplantation
Epperla, N., Ahn, K. W., Khanal, M., Litovich, C., Ahmed, S., Ghosh, N., Fenske, T. S., Kharfan-Dabaja, M. A., Sureda, A., Hamadani, M.
Biology of blood and marrow transplantation : journal of the American Society for Blood and Marrow Transplantation. 2020
Abstract
BACKGROUND Reduced-intensity conditioning (RIC) regimens are frequently used for allogeneic hematopoietic cell transplantation (allo-HCT) in diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL). However, the RIC regimen with the best risk/benefit profile for allo-HCT in DLBCL is not known. This is particularly important, as patients with DLBCL undergoing allo-HCT in the future would be enriched for those whose lymphoma has failed chimeric antigen receptor T-cell (CAR-T) therapy or other novel immunotherapies, with potentially more advanced disease and suboptimal performance scores. Using the CIBMTR database, we report the outcomes of the three most commonly used allo-HCT RIC regimens in DLBCL. METHODS 562 adult DLBCL patients in the CIBMTR registry undergoing allo-HCT using matched related or unrelated donors, between 2008-2016 were included in the analysis. Patients received one of the three RIC regimens: fludarabine/i.v. busulfan (~6•4mg/kg) (Flu/Bu), fludarabine/melphalan (140mg/m(2)) (Flu/Mel140) or BCNU/etoposide/cytarabine/melphalan (BEAM). FINDINGS The study cohort was divided into three groups: Flu/Bu (n=151), Flu/Mel140 (n=296) and BEAM (n=115). Relative to Flu/Bu, the Flu/Mel140 (HR=2.33, 95%CI=1.42-3.82; p=0.001) and BEAM (HR=2.54, 95%CI=1.34-4.80; p=0.004) regimens were associated with a higher non-relapse mortality (NRM) risk. Although the risk of relapse with Flu/Mel140 was lower compared to Flu/Bu (HR=0.70, 95%CI=0.52-0.95; p=0.02), this did not translate in an improvement in progression-free (HR=1.04) or overall survival (HR=1.30). There was a significantly higher risk of grade 3-4 acute graft-versus-host disease with BEAM (HR=2.19, 95%CI=1.10-4.35; p=0.03) compared to Flu/Bu. In the chemosensitive subset, multivariate analysis showed a significantly higher mortality risk with Flu/Mel140 (HR=1.48, 95%CI=1.07-2.04, p=0.02) relative to Flu/Bu conditioning. CONCLUSIONS In the largest analysis comparing the impact of various RIC conditioning regimens on the survival of DLBCL patients undergoing allo-HCT, our results suggest that Flu/Bu is a better RIC choice in less fit or heavily pretreated patients due to lowest NRM risk.
-
9.
Changes in patients population and characteristics of hematopoietic stem cell transplantation for relapsed/refractory Hodgkin lymphoma: an analysis of the Lymphoma Working Party of the EBMT
Sureda, A., Genadieva Stavrik, S., Boumendil, A., Finel, H., Khvedelidze, I., Dietricht, S., Dreger, P., Hermine, O., Kyriakou, C., Robinson, S., et al
Bone marrow transplantation. 2020
Abstract
Indications for autologous (auto-HCT) and allogeneic transplantation (allo-HCT) in relapsed/refractory Hodgkin lymphoma (rrHL) have been long established. The expectation is that long-term outcomes have significantly improved over time with increased experience in these procedures. The objective of this study was to assess whether this is the case and to identify further areas of improvement. A total of 13,639 adult patients receiving an auto-HCT or allo-HCT for rrHL were reported to the European Society for Blood and Marrow Transplantation (EBMT) over a 25-year period. Regarding auto-HCT, recipients are younger, interval between diagnosis and transplant shorter, peripheral blood has become the universal stem cell source and the use of total body irradiation is almost non-existent in recent years. Allo-HCT is currently mostly used as a second transplant; recipients are younger, fitter and less frequently, chemorefractory. Reduced intensity conditioning protocols have vastly replaced myeloablative protocols. Increasing numbers of haplo-HCT have been reported. Both in auto-HCT and allo-HCT, NRM, PFS and OS have significantly improved but relapse remains the main cause of treatment failure. A better selection of patients and improvements in the supportive care has resulted in a reduction in the NRM. Relapse after HCT remains unchanged and further research is needed.
-
10.
Outcomes of Rituximab-BEAM Versus BEAM Conditioning Regimen in Patients With Diffuse Large B Cell Lymphoma Undergoing Autologous Transplantation
Jagadeesh, D., Majhail, N. S., He, Y., Ahn, K. W., Litovich, C., Ahmed, S., Aljurf, M., Bacher, U., Badawy, S. M., Bejanyan, N., et al
Cancer. 2020
-
-
-
Free full text
-
Full text
-
Editor's Choice
Abstract
BACKGROUND Although rituximab-based high-dose therapy is frequently used in diffuse large B cell lymphoma (DLBCL) patients undergoing autologous hematopoietic cell transplantation (auto-HCT), data supporting the benefits are not available. Herein, we report the impact of rituximab-based conditioning on auto-HCT outcomes in patients who have DLBCL. METHODS Using the Center for International Blood and Marrow Transplant Research (CIBMTR) registry, 862 adult DLBCL patients undergoing auto-HCT between 2003 and 2017 using BEAM (BCNU, etoposide, cytarabine, melphalan) conditioning regimen were included. All patients received frontline rituximab-containing chemoimmunotherapy and had chemosensitive disease pre-HCT. Early chemoimmunotherapy failure was defined as not achieving complete remission (CR) after frontline chemoimmunotherapy or relapse within 1 year of initial diagnosis. The primary outcome was overall survival (OS). RESULTS The study cohort was divided into 2 groups: BEAM (n = 667) and R-BEAM (n = 195). On multivariate analysis, no significant difference was seen in OS (P = .83) or progression-free survival (PFS) (P = .61) across the 2 cohorts. No significant association between the use of rituximab and risk of relapse (P = .15) or nonrelapse mortality (P = .12) was observed. Variables independently associated with lower OS included older age at auto-HCT (P < .001), absence of CR at auto-HCT (P < .001) and early chemoimmunotherapy failure (P < .001). Older age (P < .0002) and non-CR pre-HCT (P < .0001) were also associated with inferior PFS. There was no significant difference in early infectious complications between the 2 cohorts. CONCLUSION In this large registry analysis of DLBCL patients undergoing auto-HCT, the addition of rituximab to the BEAM conditioning regimen had no impact on transplantation outcomes. Older age, absence of CR pre auto-HCT, and early chemoimmunotherapy failure were associated with inferior survival.
PICO Summary
Population
Adult DLBCL patients undergoing auto-HCT between 2003 and 2017 (n=862)
Intervention
BEAM (BCNU, etoposide, cytarabine, melphalan) conditioning with Rituximab (R-BEAM, n=195)
Comparison
BEAM conditioning without Rituximab (BEAM, n=667)
Outcome
On multivariate analysis, no significant difference was seen in OS or progression-free survival (PFS) across the 2 cohorts. No significant association between the use of rituximab and risk of relapse or nonrelapse mortality was observed. There was no significant difference in early infectious complications between the 2 cohorts.