Frontiers in Pediatrics (Jan 2022)

To Lighten the Burden of Cure: Thyroid Disease in Long-Term Survivors After TBI Conditioning for Paediatric ALL

  • Natalia Zubarovskaya,
  • Dorothea Bauer,
  • Leila Ronceray,
  • Ulrike Poetschger,
  • Paulina Kurzmann,
  • Carina Lender,
  • Zoya Kuzmina,
  • Anita Lawitschka,
  • Anita Lawitschka

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fped.2021.798974
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9

Abstract

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Thyroid disorders are well-studied after allogeneic haematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT) following total body irradiation (TBI)-based conditioning, occurring in 15–30% of paediatric survivors. The toxic effect of TBI is known but data on the role of immunological dysregulation (ID) and chronic graft-versus-host-disease (cGvHD) are scarce. We studied functional and structural thyroid disorders in 97 paediatric ALL patients after TBI-based HSCT, assessing their correlation with patient/transplant characteristics including cGvHD, prolonged immunosuppression and ID. The 10- and 15-year cumulative incidence (CI) of functional disorders was 50 and 60%. Univariate analysis revealed TBI in 6 vs. 8 fractions (p = 0.01), an interval between ALL diagnosis and HSCT <1 year (p = 0.038), and the application of ATG (p = 0.044) as risk factors. The 10- and 15-year CI of structural disorders was 60 and 80%. No correlation between patient/transplant characteristics and structural disorders was observed. cGvHD, prolonged immunosuppression and additional radiotherapy were not associated with any thyroid disease. We observed a significant correlation between ID and the development of thyroid dysfunction in patients with structural changes (10-year CI: 77% for patients with ID vs. 56% without ID, p = 0.02). The impact of our results on thyroid follow-up evaluations and the significance of hormonal replacement therapy are discussed.

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