Blood Advances (Oct 2019)

Myeloablative vs reduced intensity T-cell–replete haploidentical transplantation for hematologic malignancy

  • Scott R. Solomon,
  • Andrew St. Martin,
  • Nirav N. Shah,
  • Giancarlo Fatobene,
  • Monzr M. Al Malki,
  • Karen K. Ballen,
  • Asad Bashey,
  • Nelli Bejanyan,
  • Javier Bolaños Meade,
  • Claudio G. Brunstein,
  • Zachariah DeFilipp,
  • Richard E. Champlin,
  • Ephraim J. Fuchs,
  • Mehdi Hamadani,
  • Peiman Hematti,
  • Christopher G. Kanakry,
  • Joseph P. McGuirk,
  • Ian K. McNiece,
  • Stefan O. Ciurea,
  • Marcelo C. Pasquini,
  • Vanderson Rocha,
  • Rizwan Romee,
  • Sagar S. Patel,
  • Sumithira Vasu,
  • Edmund K. Waller,
  • John R. Wingard,
  • Mei-Jie Zhang,
  • Mary Eapen

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 3, no. 19
pp. 2836 – 2844

Abstract

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Abstract: In the absence of prospective studies that examine the effect of conditioning regimen intensity after T-cell–replete haploidentical transplant for acute myeloid leukemia (AML), acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL), and myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS), a retrospective cohort analysis was performed. Of the 1325 eligible patients (AML, n = 818; ALL, n = 286; and MDS, n = 221), 526 patients received a myeloablative regimen and 799 received a reduced-intensity regimen. Graft-versus-host disease prophylaxis was uniform with posttransplant cyclophosphamide, a calcineurin inhibitor, and mycophenolate mofetil. The primary end point was disease-free survival. Cox regression models were built to study the effect of conditioning regimen intensity on transplant outcomes. For patients aged 18 to 54 years, disease-free survival was lower (hazard ratio [HR], 1.34; 42% vs 51%; P = .007) and relapse was higher (HR, 1.51; 44% vs 33%; P = .001) with a reduced-intensity regimen compared with a myeloablative regimen. Nonrelapse mortality did not differ according to regimen intensity. For patients aged 55 to 70 years, disease-free survival (HR, 0.97; 37% vs 43%; P = .83) and relapse (HR, 1.32; 42% vs 31%; P = .11) did not differ according to regimen intensity. Nonrelapse mortality was lower with reduced-intensity regimens (HR, 0.64; 20% vs 31%; P = .02). Myeloablative regimens are preferred for AML, ALL, and MDS; reduced-intensity regimens should be reserved for those unable to tolerate myeloablation.