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Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation for Children: PHO Boards Prep Michael Pulsipher, MD Professor Of Pediatrics Primary Children’s Hospital Huntsman Cancer Institute/University of Utah School of Medicine Chair, Pediatric Blood and Marrow Transplant Consortium HLA and Donor Issues An 18-month-old child with ALL in second remission is referred for transplantation. Which would be the best donor for this child? A. The child’s own sorted cord blood (cell dose 5X10^6/kg) B. A 55-year-old female unrelated donor, 7/8 match (willing to donate marrow or peripheral blood stem cells) C. A cord blood unit matched at 4/6 antigens: cell dose 5.4x106/kg D. A 40-year-old male unrelated donor matched at 8/8 loci (only willing to donate peripheral blood stem cells) E. A cord blood unit matched at 6/6 antigens (HLA A, B, DRB1) with a cell dose of 4.0x106/kg HLA and Donor Issues An 18-month-old child with ALL in second remission is referred for transplantation. Which would be the best donor for this child? A. The child’s own sotred cord blood (cell dose 5X10^6/kg) B. A 55-year-old female unrelated donor, 7/8 match (willing to donate marrow or peripheral blood stem cells) C. A cord blood unit matched at 4/6 antigens: cell dose 5.4x106/kg D. A 40-year-old male unrelated donor matched at 8/8 loci (only willing to donate peripheral blood stem cells) E. A cord blood unit matched at 6/6 antigens (HLA A, B, DRB1) with a cell dose of 4.0x106/kg Human Leukocyte Antigen Groups (HLA, Chromosome 6) HLA Loci and Known Alleles Class I (A, B, C) Found on almost all cells (except some neurons) HLA-A HLA-B HLA-C Class II (DR, DQ, DP) Found on antigen-presenting cells, B cells DRB1 DQB1 DPB1 DRB 3,4,5 2946 3693 2466 1684 712 472 58, 15, 21 Minor HLA Antigens—If it were only as simple as HLA Minor H Antigens Encoded by Autosomal Genes HA-1 – HA-7 A2-1 – A2-4 B7-1 – B7-6 A3, A11, A29, B44, B65, Cw7 Minor H Antigens Encoded by the Y chromosome HLA-A2-HY HLA-A1-HY HLA-B7-HY B8-1 Approach to HLA by Stem Cell Source Table Level of Human Leukocyte Antigen (HLA) Typing Currently Used for a,b Different Hematopoietic Stem Cell Sources Class I Antigens Class II Antigens Stem Cell Source HLA A HLA B HLA C HLA DRB1 HLA DQB1 HLA DPB1 Matched Sibling BM/PBSCs Antigen Antigen Optional Allele Matched Sibling/Other Related Donorc BM/PBSCs Allele Allele Allele Allele Optional Optional Unrelated Donor BM/PBSCs Allele Allele Allele Allele Optional Optional Unrelated Donor Cord Blood Antigen (Allele Optional) Antigen (Allele Optional) Allele Optional Allele Optional Optional Stem Cell Sources—Different Ways to Grow a New Bone Marrow • Reported Sources – Fetal Liver Cells – Single or small numbers of “stem cells” • iPSCs – Umbilical Cord Blood (UCB) – Bone Marrow (BM) – Cytokine Mobilized Peripheral Blood Mononuclear Cells (PBMC) Bone Marrow—the Traditional Source Other Sources—Peripheral Blood Mononuclear Cells and Umbilical Cord Blood Hematopoietic Cell Sources—Content of the Product Dictates Uses • Autologous Transplant (High Dose or Mega-Dose Therapy) – Bone Marrow (risk with harvest) – Cytokine Mobilized Peripheral Blood Mononuclear Cells (PBMC, quick engraftment) – Manipulation of either source to remove cancer cells or alter immune response Winner—PBMC! • Allogeneic Transplant – Umbilical Cord Blood (few Tcells, increased risk of rejection and slow engraftment, can use safely with more HLA mismatches, less chronic GVHD) – Bone Marrow (Intermediate Tcells numbers, intermediate rejection and GVHD) – PBMC (More T-cells, rapid engraftment, less early transplant morbidity, probably more chronic GVHD) Winner—? Levels of Matching Key Considerations Donor/HLA • HLA match trumps everything • Single allele/antigen mismatch is all that is allowed for BM/PBSC (7/8) • Cord Blood allows 4/6 matches – 6-7/8 better, high cell dose helps with mismatches • BM is preferred in pediatrics over PBSC – Data especially strong for nonmalignant disorders – PBSC results in faster engraftment, more GVHD, used for reduced intensity regimens and second HCT Screening a Donor • Need Assent, beware parental bias • Challenge if recipient unknown or difficult relationship • Avoid risks to donor health – Donors with underlying disorders should be assessed by experts to avoid risk • Screened for transmissible diseases – HIV, HBV, HCV, syphilis, WNV, Chagas, etc. Other Considerations for Donor Choice • Assent/Consent—if an 18+yo sib is equivalent to younger, choose the adult • Blood type matching helps/not necessary • CMV negative donors for negative recipients – Positive for positive may be better • Gender match or male to female good: avoid multiparous females • Donor/recipient size mismatch can be a problem – Max from donor 20mL/kg, goal CD34+/kg >3-5x10^6 • Cord dose >3x10^7 TNC/kg, can use 2 cords – Outcomes better with 1 cord if dose OK (less GVHD) Clinical Differences Between Stem Cell Sources—T-cell Content Key Table Comparison of Hematopoietic Stem Cell Products PBSCs BM Cord Blood T-cell Depleted BM/PBSCs Haploidentical T-cell Depleted BM/PBSCs Very low Very low T-cell content High CD34+ content Low (but Moderate– Moderate higher high potency) Moderate– high Moderate–high Time to neutrophil recovery Rapid (13– Moderate Slow (16– 25 d) (15–25 d) 55 d) Moderate (15–25 d) Moderate (15–25 d) Moderate Low Early post-HCT risk of Low– infections, EBV- moderate LPD Moderate High Very High Very High Risk of graft rejection Low– Moderate– moderate high Moderate– high Moderate–high Low Time to immune Rapid (6– a reconstitution 12 mo) Moderate Slow (6–24 Slow (6–24 (6–18 mo) mo) mo) Slow (9–24 mo) Risk of acute GVHD Moderate Moderate Moderate Low Low Risk of chronic GVHD High Moderate Low Low Low b Which is syngeneic, which is allogeneic, who is the better donor? Major Increases in Risk occur with Pretransplant Comorbidities • Active infection/inflammation • Non-recovery of counts pre-HCT (prolonged neutropenia) • Non-remission • Underlying organ damage – Pulmonary, Hepatic, Cardiac, Renal—all risks • Performance Status (low KS/LPS) • Psychiatric Disorder requiring significant therapy • Some of these issues can be addressed with reduced intensity regimen approaches Implications of Reduced Intensity Current Practice: Preparative Regimens • Unpublished evidence suggests myeloablative approaches superior to RIC for AML/MDS – Busulfan-based regimens (adult data) • Retrospective evidence suggests TBI-based approaches better for ALL – iBFM trial testing this • Non-malignant disorder prep regimens vary – RIC for HLH, RIC whenever possible • Some disorders require reduced, minimal, or no prep – FA—sensitive to TBI, chemotherapy – SCID—Sib donors, no prep needed, URD, less prep may be possible. Allogeneic Conditioning Regimens Preengraftment (Day +1 to +30) Patient Presentation • 6 yo female with h/o AML s/p MUD now day +9 • WBC 0.1 LFTs normal. BUN 13, Cr 0.2 • Temp 40C. RR 40s. O2 Sat 90% • CXR: Fine patchy bilateral infiltrate • BP: 100/50 Preengraftment (Day +1 to +30) Case 1 Preengraftment (Day +1 to +30) • Begins with conditioning until engraftment (day 30) • Severe neutropenia (ANC <100) • Severe lymphopenia (ALC <100) • Hypogammaglobulinemia (IgG < 400) • Severe GI mucosal disruption Phases of Predictable Opportunistic Infections Adapted from Van Burik, Freifeld. Clinical Oncology, 3rd Edition. Philadelphia: Churchill Livingstone; 2004:942) Prevention & Prophylaxis HSV/VZV • Acyclovir 500 mg/m2 IV or PO tid CMV • If CMV quant-PCR elevated 1. GCV or foscarnet pre-emptive therapy 2. Prophylaxis strategies challenging Fungal • Fluconazole or voriconazole Prevention & Prophylaxis PJP • Septra “load” pre-HCT • Restart day +30 • Other meds • Pentamidine • Dapsone • Atovaquone Bacterial • ? Antibiotics ? Levofloxacin IVIG • Replace for low IVIG levels <400mg/dL Key Infection Considerations • Transplant approach affects immune recovery – Cord blood, T-cell Depl., ATG use= prolonged IS – Marked increase in viral reactivation/infection • CMV, Adeno, EBV, HHV-6, HSV—surveillance essential • Occurrence of cGVHD adds to risk – Use of and dose of steroids critical risk factor – Doses <1mg/kg and qod dosing can decrease risk Acute Graft-vs-Host Disease • • • • • Usually diagnosed before day +100 Typically occurs near time of engraftment Almost always involves skin Also involves intestine, liver, or lung Substantial cause of morbidity and mortality Palmar and Solar Erythema Puritic Maculopapular Rash Basal Keratinocyte Apoptosis Basal Intestinal Crypt Apoptosis Acute GVHD Staging Stage Skin Liver Gut 1 Rash on <25% Bili 2-3 mg/dl Diarrhea 280555ml/m2/d 2 Rash on 25-50% Bili 3.1-6 mg/dl Diarrhea 556883ml/m2/d 3 Rash on >50% Bili 6.1-15 mg/dl Diarrhea >883ml/m2/d 4 Generalized erythroderma with bullae Bili >15 mg/dl Severe abdominal pain Acute GVHD Grading Grade Skin Liver Gut 1 Stage I-II none none 2 Stage III Stage I Stage I 3 -------- Stage II-III Stage II-III 4 Stage IV Stage IV Stage IV EFS, OS by aGVHD Grade Combined Effects of MRD and GVHD on Relapse and EFS Acute GVHD Prophylaxis • Most use calcineurin inhibitors (tacro/CSP) + – MTX given days 1,3, 6 +/- 11 for sib/URD BM/PBSC – Or Mycophenylate mofetil (MMF) for cords – Other agents in combination: sirolimus, ATG, post-tx cyclophosphamide, T-cell depletion • Complete removal of T-cells problematic – Excess infections, rejection, relapse Primary Acute GVHD Therapy • Mild disease—limited skin rash alone – Optimize tacro or CSP levels, topical steroids • If progressive or multisystem – Prednisilone 2mg/kg/d • Steroid Refractory aGVHD (no response 3-7d) – No clearly superior second regimen – ECP, etanercept, infliximab, pentostatin – Poor prognosis due to infectious complications Case Scenario An 8-year-old child with AML 6 months post-transplant comes to clinic complaining of a maculo-papular rash on arms and legs, dry, irritated eyes, and a persistent cough. His mother has noticed that he gets winded much more quickly than he used to. Which investigation is most likely to yield a diagnosis? A. Blood PCR for CMV B. Bronchiolar lavage to rule out pneumocystis infection C. Pulmonary function tests and high resolution CT D. Galactomannan test for fungus E. Upper GI endoscopy Chronic GVHD • Diagnosed after day 100 (2m sometimes) – – – – – – – Immunodeficiency Skin- lichen planus poikiloderma Scleroderma Sicca syndrome Hepatic- vanishing bile ducts Pulmonary- bronchiolitis obliterans GI- esophageal strictures, fat malabsorption Cumulative incidence of discontinuation of immune suppression after the diagnosis of cGVHD shown with OS. Jacobsohn D A et al. Blood 2011;118:4472-4479 ©2011 by American Society of Hematology OS by risk factors included in multivariate analysis. Jacobsohn D A et al. Blood 2011;118:4472-4479 ©2011 by American Society of Hematology Standard Therapy for Chronic GVHD • Prednisone 1 mg/kg/day • Taper to 1 mg/kg/every other day over 6 weeks • Prolonged course, usually tapered over one year • One half have resolution of GVHD • Median duration of treatment is 2 years for responding patients Salvage treatment for chronic GVHD •MMF •FK506 •Thalidomide •Plaquenil •Pentostatin •Methotrexate •Rituximab •PUVA •photopheresis Case Scenario A 10 year old by undergoes stem cell transplantation for CML. The graft is T-Cell depleted as part of an NIH sponsored IRB approved research protocol. Day 145 post transplant the patient develops severe cervical lymphadenopathy and splenomegaly. The most likely diagnosis is: A. Relapsed CML in accelerated phase. B. Secondary Hodgkin disease. C. PTLD. D. Toxoplasmosis. E. Transfusion acquired HIV. Post-Tx Lymphoproliferative Disorder • Occurs within a few months after BMT • Highly associated with T-cell Depletion – Product depletion techniques that preserve B-cells • CD34+ selection – In vivo depletion (ATG, less with campath) – Therapy that is highly T-cell suppressive • ATG for resistant GVHD • Treatment – IS withdrawal, rituxan, cyclophosphamide, EBVtargeted cytotoxic T-lymphocytes (CTLs) Preengraftment (Day +1 to +30) - VOD Venoocclusive Disease (VOD, also sinusoidal obstruction syndrome, SOS) • Typically in first 14 days of transplant, up through day +30 • About 25% patients affected • Caused by endothelial damage in the hepatic venules platelet deposition hepatic congestion cholestasis • Associated with Cy, Busulfan, and TBI •New data show sirolimus use is a risk Preengraftment (Day +1 to +30) - VOD Venoocclusive Disease ctd. • Signs and Sx: 1. Weight gain 2. RUQ pain (capsular distention) 3. Hyperbilirubinemia 4. Plt refractory 5. Ascites (capillary leak) 6. Renal Insufficiency 7. Pulmonary Edema Preengraftment (Day +1 to +30) - VOD Venoocclusive Disease ctd. • Management: 1. Fluid management 2. Maintain intravascular volume 3. Manage renal failure 4. Consider antithrombotic agents (e.g. defibrotide) Postengraftment (Days 30-100) Transplant-associated Thrombotic Microangiopathy (TA-TMA) • Belongs to the family of thromobotic microangiopathies including , HUS and TTP. • Occurs when endothelial damage resulting from HCT causes microangiopathic hemolytic anemia and platelet consumption, resulting in thrombosis and fibrin deposition in the microcirculation. • The kidney is most commonly affected. • Patients present with anemia; thrombocytopenia; often schistocytes on blood smear; elevated LDH and decreased haptoglobin • Calcineurin inhibitors (especially + sirolimus), TBI, high-dose busulfan, and infections increase risk Patient Presentation • 6 year old day +64 out from TBI-based allogeneic transplant – Presents to the ER with confusion – Short tonic-clinic seizure witnessed in the ED – Loss of vision noted – What are key clinical facts you need to know? Postengraftment (Days 30-100) Postengraftment (Days 30-100) Posterior Reversible Encephalopathy Syndrome (PRES) • Headache, confusion, seizures, and visual loss and most often caused by malignant hypertension. • In HSCT patients, the intractable hypertension and the associated PRES have been linked to the use of calcineurininhibitors (tacrolimus and cyclosporine). • The diagnosis of PRES is typically made on MRI imaging of the brain, which reveals a characteristic pattern of enhancement, commonly in the posterior circulation, which may be seen, but poorly on CT Late Issues after HCT • Two years after BMT, most common problem? – Relapse • Non-relapse events – Second malignancies • 2-6%, higher in FA patients, associated with XRT – Growth failure • Rare, associated with TBI + CNS XRT – Endocrine issues • Hypothyroidism • Gonadal failure • Sequelae of pre-HCT Rx and GVHD – Cardiac related to XRT and anthracylines – GVHD effect on lungs, QoL • Emerging Evidence of TBI effect on children < 3 at HCT Hematopoietic Cell Transplantation: Current Indications • Cancer Treatment – Allows high dose chemotherapy – Immunological platform • Replacement or “Resetting”of a Dysfunctional Hematopoietic/Immune System – Absent vs. aberrant function • Gene Therapy – Only useful if the gene can be delivered by hematopoietic cells The Big Decisions: Chemotherapy vs. Transplant—Auto vs. Allo • Autologous: TRM <1% at most centers. – CR1 if better outcome/ difficult salvage – Fertility/ immune suppression/ late effects • Allogeneic: TRM 5-20% – GVHD morbidity/QOL chief concerns – Would want a 15% advantage over chemotherapy/autologous options Indications for ALL HCT (Allo only) • CR1 – Primary induction failure – Hypodiploidy (<44 chromosomes) – Persistent MRD after consolidation • CR2 – Early BM relapse (<36m from dx, esp if on rx) – Late BM relapse if MRD+ after reinduction – Any T-cell or Ph+ BM relapse • CR3—any relapse Indications for AML HCT • CR1 – – – – Induction failure Mono-7, Mono-5, Del 5q, High AR flt-3/ITD+ Persistent MRD after induction (experimental) Most recent approach • Sibling donor, pt with intermediate/HR disease • CR2, CR3—any relapse • Auto BMT? – CBF or M3 AML with late relapse (>12m from dx) and clean marrow (PCR negative) Indications for CML/MDS/JMML HCT • CML – Resistance/failure of TKIs – Good donor with strong family preference • Significant growth failure with TKIs – Advanced phase • MDS – Any child with MDS – Adults “low risk” MDS: wait until progression • JMML – Trying to define “better actors”, currently omit Noonan’s syndrome (germline mut PTPN11) – Careful with NF1 pts, they may have CNS tumors, peripheral nerve sheath tumors Indications for Lymphoma • NHL – Relapsed Disease (attempt auto) – For lymphoblastic treat similar to ALL (allo) – Allo role for resistant or relapse after auto • HL – Auto for relapsed/resistant disease – Allo can salvage auto failures if disease responsive Figure 2 Biology of Blood and Marrow Transplant 2010 16, 223-230DOI: (10.1016/j.bbmt.2009.09.021) Copyright © 2010 American Society for Blood and Marrow Transplantation Terms and Conditions Indications for Solid Tumors • Neuroblastoma – Documented Improvement for High Risk CR1 patients • Brain Tumors – Good data for use in <3yo to avoid XRT – Data in medulloblastoma, CNS germ cell tumors for relapsed disease • Responsiveness, resectability, XRT important • Other Tumors – Role for Ewings, relapsed HR Wilm’s, Rhabdo unsure – Responsive HR germ cell tumors (relapsed) and HR retinoblastoma, some evidence of benefit with auto Indications for Non-malignant Disorders • BM failure or lineage insufficiency – Severe aplastic anemia, Fanconi Anemia, SDS, DC, CAMT, TAR, DBA, others – RBC: SSD, Thalassemia – WBC: KS, LAD • Immune Deficiencies/Dysregulation – SCID, WAS, CD40L def (hyper IgM), CGD, IPEX, others – HLH, CA-EBV HCT as Gene Therapy • Inborn Errors of Metabolism – Hurler Syndrome MPS-IH – X-Adrenoleukodystrophy (X-ALD) – Metachromatic Leukodystrophy – Many others Best of Luck on your Test! • Future of HCT – Targeting cellular therapies • • • • CART NK Cells BiTE BiNK – Combined therapies with immunomodulators • Cells can cure cancer