Leukemia Research Reports (Jan 2018)

Unrelated HLA mismatched microtransplantation in a patient with refractory secondary acute myeloid leukemia

  • Nathan Punwani,
  • Noah Merin,
  • Ann Mohrbacher,
  • George Yaghmour,
  • Allison Sano,
  • Laleh Ramezani,
  • Preet M. Chaudhary,
  • Giridharan Ramsingh

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9
pp. 18 – 20

Abstract

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Microtransplantation (MST), a type of HLA-mismatched allogeneic cellular therapy, is a promising, cellular therapy for acute myeloid leukemia (AML). MST transfuses granulocyte colony-stimulating factor (G-CSF)-mobilized, HLA-mismatched donor peripheral blood stem cells into patients undergoing conventional chemotherapy. MST, using haploidentical donors, has been shown to yield clinical benefit without any permanent marrow engraftment in AML. Consequently, graft-versus-host disease concerns are rendered irrelevant with no need for immunosuppression. We describe the first reported patient with refractory AML who underwent salvage MST from an unrelated, complete HLA-mismatched donor. The patient achieved remission without complication, warranting further study of unrelated HLA-mismatched donor MST in AML.