Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
2134673 Experimental Hematology 2006 7 Pages PDF
Abstract

ObjectiveCD3/CD19 depletion may improve engraftment and immune reconstitution after haploidentical hematopoietic cell transplantation (HHCT) as grafts not only contain CD34+ stem cells but also CD34− progenitors and natural killer, dendritic, and facilitating cells.Patients and MethodsTen consecutive patients received HHCT with CD3/CD19-depleted grafts. Reduced-intensity conditioning was performed with fludarabine (150–200 mg/m2), thiotepa (10 mg/kg), melphalan (120 mg/m2), and OKT-3 (5 mg/day, day −5 to +14) without additional posttransplant immunosuppression. Diagnoses were AML (n = 4), ALL (n = 3), NHL (n = 2), and multiple myeloma (n = 1). All patients were “high risk” with refractory disease or relapse after preceding HCT. The CD3/CD19-depleted haploidentical grafts contained a median of 7.8 × 106 (range, 5.2–17 × 106) CD34+ cells/kg, 5.5 × 107 (range, 0.02–8.6 × 107) CD56+ cells/kg, and 2.0 × 104 (range, 0.006–44 × 104) CD3+ T cells/kg. Engraftment was rapid with median time to greater than 500 granulocytes/μL of 13 (range, 11–17) days, greater than 20,000 platelets/μL of 11 (range, 8–16) days, and full donor chimerism after 2 weeks in all patients. Six cases of grade II GVHD occurred. One patient, who received the highest T cell dose, developed lethal grade IV GVHD. Treatment-related mortality in the first 100 days was 3/10 (30%) with one death each due to idiopathic pneumonia syndrome, GVHD, and CMV disease. Two patients died after day 100, one due to relapse and one with systemic adenoviral infection. Overall survival is 5/10 patients (50%) with a median follow-up of 435 (range, 229–814) days.ConclusionThis regimen is promising in high-risk patients lacking a suitable donor, and a prospective phase I/II study is ongoing.

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