Haematologica (Dec 2008)

Donor/recipient mixed chimerism does not predict graft failure in children with β-thalassemia given an allogeneic cord blood transplant from an HLA-identical sibling

  • Daniela Lisini,
  • Marco Zecca,
  • Giovanna Giorgiani,
  • Daniela Montagna,
  • Rosaria Cristantielli,
  • Massimo Labirio,
  • Pierangela Grignani,
  • Carlo Previderè,
  • Alessandra Di Cesare-Merlone,
  • Giovanni Amendola,
  • Elena Bergami,
  • Angela Mastronuzzi,
  • Rita Maccario,
  • Franco Locatelli

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3324/haematol.13248
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 93, no. 12

Abstract

Read online

Background Donor/recipient mixed chimerism has been reported to be associated with an increased risk of graft failure in patients with β-thalassemia given a bone marrow transplant. We investigated the relationship between the degree of mixed chimerism over time and clinical outcome of children undergoing cord blood transplantation for β-thalassemia.Design and Methods Twenty-seven consecutive children given a cord blood transplant from a related donor were analyzed by short tandem repeat polymerase chain reaction and their chimerism results were compared with those of 79 consecutive patients who received a bone marrow transplant from either a relative (RD-BMT, n=42) or an unrelated donor (UD-BMT, n=37). Cord blood and bone marrow recipients received comparable preparative regimens.Results All cord blood recipients engrafted and displayed mixed chimerism early after transplantation; 13/27 converted to full donor chimerism over time, while 14 maintained stable mixed chimerism; all patients are alive and transfusion-independent. Twenty-four of the 79 bone marrow-recipients (12 UD- and 12 RD-BMT) exhibited full donor chimerism at all time points examined, 4/79 (2 UD- and 2 RD-BMT) did not engraft and 51/79 (23 UD- and 28 RD-BMT) displayed mixed chimerism at the time of hematologic reconstitution. Forty of 51 bone marrow recipients with mixed chimerism converted to full donor chimerism (17 UD- and 23 RD-BMT), 3/51 maintained stable mixed chimerism (1 UD- and 2 RD-BMT), while 8/51 (5 UD- and 3 RD-BMT) progressively lost the graft, and became transfusion-dependent again.Conclusions Mixed chimerism is a frequent event and does not predict the occurrence of graft failure in children with β-thalassemia given a cord blood transplant from a relative.