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Genotype, oxidase status, and preceding infection or autoinflammation do not affect allogeneic HCT outcomes for CGD.

Authors :
Leiding JW
Arnold DE
Parikh S
Logan B
Marsh RA
Griffith LM
Wu R
Kidd S
Mallhi K
Chellapandian D
Si Lim SJ
Grunebaum E
Falcone EL
Murguia-Favela L
Grossman D
Prasad VK
Heimall JR
Touzot F
Burroughs LM
Bleesing J
Kapoor N
Dara J
Williams O
Kapadia M
Oshrine BR
Bednarski JJ
Rayes A
Chong H
Cuvelier GDE
Forbes Satter LR
Martinez C
Vander Lugt MT
Yu LC
Chandrakasan S
Joshi A
Prockop SE
Dávila Saldaña BJ
Aquino V
Broglie LA
Ebens CL
Madden LM
DeSantes K
Milner J
Rangarajan HG
Shah AJ
Gillio AP
Knutsen AP
Miller HK
Moore TB
Graham P
Bauchat A
Bunin NJ
Teira P
Petrovic A
Chandra S
Abdel-Azim H
Dorsey MJ
Birbrayer O
Cowan MJ
Dvorak CC
Haddad E
Kohn DB
Notarangelo LD
Pai SY
Puck JM
Pulsipher MA
Torgerson TR
Malech HL
Kang EM
Source :
Blood [Blood] 2023 Dec 14; Vol. 142 (24), pp. 2105-2118.
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Chronic granulomatous disease (CGD) is a primary immunodeficiency characterized by life-threatening infections and inflammatory conditions. Hematopoietic cell transplantation (HCT) is the definitive treatment for CGD, but questions remain regarding patient selection and impact of active disease on transplant outcomes. We performed a multi-institutional retrospective and prospective study of 391 patients with CGD treated either conventionally (non-HCT) enrolled from 2004 to 2018 or with HCT from 1996 to 2018. Median follow-up after HCT was 3.7 years with a 3-year overall survival of 82% and event-free survival of 69%. In a multivariate analysis, a Lansky/Karnofsky score <90 and use of HLA-mismatched donors negatively affected survival. Age, genotype, and oxidase status did not affect outcomes. Before HCT, patients had higher infection density, higher frequency of noninfectious lung and liver diseases, and more steroid use than conventionally treated patients; however, these issues did not adversely affect HCT survival. Presence of pre-HCT inflammatory conditions was associated with chronic graft-versus-host disease. Graft failure or receipt of a second HCT occurred in 17.6% of the patients and was associated with melphalan-based conditioning and/or early mixed chimerism. At 3 to 5 years after HCT, patients had improved growth and nutrition, resolved infections and inflammatory disease, and lower rates of antimicrobial prophylaxis or corticosteroid use compared with both their baseline and those of conventionally treated patients. HCT leads to durable resolution of CGD symptoms and lowers the burden of the disease. Patients with active infection or inflammation are candidates for transplants; HCT should be considered before the development of comorbidities that could affect performance status. This trial was registered at www.clinicaltrials.gov as #NCT02082353.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1528-0020
Volume :
142
Issue :
24
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Blood
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
37562003
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1182/blood.2022019586