International Journal of Hematology-Oncology and Stem Cell Research (Jul 2004)
Chronic Graft versus Host Disease after Allogeneic Bone Marrow Transplantation; An Analysis of Incidence and Risk Factors.
Abstract
Chronic graft versus host disease (cGVHD) is one of the most serious potential complications of"nallogeneic bone marrow transplantation."nStudy design and method: We analyzed the incidence of cGVHD and its associated risk factors in a group of 161"nIranian recipients of HLA-identical sibling transplants, with at least 90 days post-transplantation survival. In the"nmajority of cases (n=73), cGVHD occurred in the first year after the transplant (median 273 days). The actual"nprobability of cGVHD within 1 year was 45.3±7% (CI 95%)."nResults: In a univariate analysis, the most important risk factor was the type of transplant. Peripheral blood stem cell"ntransplants (PBSCT) showed a significant increase in cGVHD compared with bone marrow transplants (BMT)"n(RR=2.34, p<0.001). In addition, male recipients were at a greater risk than female recipients (RR=2.08, p=0.004)."nOther risk factors were the presence of prior acute GVHD (RR=2.37, p=0.04) and the previous acute GVHD grade"n(p=0.03); The probabilities of cGVHD in patients with grade 0, Ι, ΙІ, ΙΙΙ, ΙV acute GVHD were 24%, 44.7%, 42.6%,"n56.8%, 64.3%, respectively."nConclusion: In a multivariate analysis, the only independent predictive factors for the development of cGVHD were the type of transplant (PBSC>BM, p<0.001) and male recipient (p=0.005). The survival rate was 88.8% and there was no significant difference in the probability of survival between BPSCT vs BMT (93.8% vs 86.6%, p=0.5).