4.6 Article

Donor lymphocyte infusion and methotrexate for immune recovery after T-cell depleted haploidentical transplantation

Journal

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF HEMATOLOGY
Volume 93, Issue 2, Pages 169-178

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/ajh.24949

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Funding

  1. 24 hours of Booty BMT Research Endowment
  2. Children's Art for Children's Cancer grant

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CD34+ cell selection minimizes graft-versus-host disease (GVHD) after haploidentical donor stem cell transplant but is associated with slow immune recovery and infections. We report a Phase I/II study of prophylactic donor lymphocyte infusion (DLI) followed by methotrexate (MTX) GVHD prophylaxis after CD34-selected haploidentical donor transplant. A prophylactic DLI was given between day +30 and +42. Rituximab was given with DLI for the last 10 patients. The goal of the study was to determine a DLI dose that would result in a CD4+ cell count > 100/mu L at Day +120 in >= 66% of patients with <= 33% grade II-III, <= 17% grade III, and no grade IV acute GVHD by Day +180. Thirty-five patients with malignant (n = 25) or nonmalignant disease (n = 10) were treated after CD34-selected haploidentical donor peripheral blood stem cell transplant. The DLI dose of 5 x 10(4)/kg met the CD4/GVHD goal with 67% of patients having CD4+ cells > 100/mu L and 11% grade II-IV acute GVHD. The cumulative incidence of chronic GVHD was 16%. Fatal viral and fungal infections occurred in 11%. The 2 year estimated overall survival was 69% and the relapse rate was 14% for patients in remission at transplant. There was no effect of NK alloreactivity on relapse. Nine of ten patients at the target DLI dose cohort of 5 x 10(4)/kg are alive with median follow-up of 18 mos (range 6-29). Delayed prophylactic DLI and MTX was associated with promising outcomes at the target DLI dose.

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