Haematologica (Oct 2015)

Better allele-level matching improves transplant-related mortality after double cord blood transplantation

  • Betül Oran,
  • Kai Cao,
  • Rima M. Saliba,
  • Katayoun Rezvani,
  • Marcos de Lima,
  • Sairah Ahmed,
  • Chitra M. Hosing,
  • Uday R. Popat,
  • Yudith Carmazzi,
  • Partow Kebriaei,
  • Yago Nieto,
  • Gabriela Rondon,
  • Dana Willis,
  • Nina Shah,
  • Simrit Parmar,
  • Amanda Olson,
  • Brandt Moore,
  • David Marin,
  • Rohtesh Mehta,
  • Marcelo Fernández-Viña,
  • Richard E. Champlin,
  • Elizabeth J. Shpall

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3324/haematol.2015.127787
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 100, no. 10

Abstract

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Cord blood transplant requires less stringent human leukocyte antigen matching than unrelated donors. In 133 patients with hematologic malignancies who engrafted after double cord blood transplantation with a dominant unit, we studied the effect of high resolution testing at 4 loci (-A, -B, -C, -DRB1) for its impact on 2-year transplant-related mortality. Ten percent of the dominant cord blood units were matched at 7–8/8 alleles using HLA-A, -B, -C, and -DRB1; 25% were matched at 6/8, 40% at 5/8, and 25% at 4/8 or less allele. High resolution typing at 4 loci showed that there was no 2-year transplant-related mortality in 7–8/8 matched patients. Patients with 5–6/8 matched dominant cord blood units had 2-year transplant-related mortality of 39% while patients with 4/8 or less matched units had 60%. Multivariate regression analyses confirmed the independent effect of high resolution typing on the outcome when adjusted for age, diagnosis, CD34+ cell dose infused, graft manipulation and cord to cord matching. The worst prognostic group included patients aged over 32 years with 4/8 or less matched cord blood units compared with patients who were either younger than 32 years old independent of allele-level matching, or aged over 32 years but with 5–6/8 matched cord blood units (Hazard Ratio 2.2; 95% confidence interval: 1.3–3.7; P