Overactivated complement is a high-risk feature in HSCT recipients with transplant associated thrombotic microangiopathy (TA-TMA), and untreated patients have dismal outcomes. We present our experience of 64 pediatric HSCT recipients with high risk TA-TMA and multi-organ injury treated with the complement blocker eculizumab. We demonstrate significant improvement in 1y post-HSCT survival to 66% in treated patients from our previously reported untreated cohort with same high-risk TA-TMA features that had 1y post-HSCT survival of 16.7%. Responding patients benefited from a brief but intensive eculizumab therapy course using PK/PD guided dosing, requiring a median of 11 doses of eculizumab (IQR 7-20). Therapy was discontinued due to resolution of TA-TMA at a median of 66 days (IQR 41-110). Subjects with higher complement activation measured by elevated blood sC5b-9 at the start of therapy were less likely to respond to treatment (OR =0.15, p-value 0.0014), and required more doses of eculizumab [r = 0.43, p-value = 0.0004]. Patients with intestinal bleeding had the fastest eculizumab clearance, required the highest number of eculizumab doses (20 vs 9, p=0.0015), and had lower 1y survival (44% vs 78%, p=0.01). Over 70% of survivors had proteinuria on long term follow up. The best GFR recovery in survivors was a median 20% lower (IQR 7.3-40.3%) than their pre-HSCT GFR. In summary, complement blockade with eculizumab is an effective therapeutic strategy for high risk TA-TMA, but some patients with severe disease lack a complete response, prompting us to propose early intervention strategies and search for additional targetable endothelial injury pathways.
We describe our retrospective clinical experience with ruxolitinib for steroid-refractory acute graft-versus-host disease (GVHD) in pediatric allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplant (HSCT) patients. Ruxolitinib was administered orally at 5 mg twice daily for children ≥ 25 kg or 2.5 mg twice daily if <25 kg. We excluded patients who received new immune suppressive agents within 2 weeks before initiation of ruxolitinib from response analysis. Patients were called a treatment failure if ruxolitinib was stopped before completion of 4 weeks of therapy because of adverse effects and not because of progression of acute GVHD. Thirteen patients received ruxolitinib, and 11 patients were assessable for response. One patient achieved a complete response, 4 had a partial response, and 2 had no response at 4 weeks after the first ruxolitinib dose. Four patients were treatment failures. Overall response rate was 45%. Adverse effects (n = 13) included grades 3 to 4 elevated alanine transaminase (n = 7), grades 3 to 4 neutropenia (n = 5), and grade 4 thrombocytopenia (n = 3). Infectious complications in patients included for response analysis (n = 11) were Epstein-Barr viremia (n = 2), adenovirus (n = 2), BK (n = 3), bacterial infections (n = 6), and fungal infections (n = 1). Seven of 13 patients were alive at a median follow-up of 401 days (range, 219 to 969) after HSCT. We observed a high rate of reversible adverse effects in children with steroid-refractory acute GVHD and a fair overall response of ruxolitinib as a salvage therapeutic agent. Further pharmacokinetic studies are needed to determine the best-tolerated dose of ruxolitinib that will achieve efficacy without significant adverse effects.
Transplant-associated thrombotic microangiopathy (TA-TMA) is an increasingly recognized complication of hematopoietic cell transplant that can result in multi-organ failure (MOF). Patients undergoing high-dose chemotherapy with autologous stem cell transplant (aHCT) for neuroblastoma require good organ function to receive post-transplant radiation and immunotherapy. We examined TA-TMA incidence and transplant outcomes in patients with neuroblastoma receiving different transplant preparative regimens. Sixty patients underwent aHCT using high-dose chemotherapy: 41 patients received carboplatin/etoposide/melphalan (CEM), 13 patients busulfan/melphalan (Bu/Mel) and six patients received tandem transplant (cyclophosphamide/thiotepa and CEM). TA-TMA with MOF was diagnosed in 13 patients (21.7%) at a median of 18 days after aHCT. TA-TMA occurred in 12 patients receiving CEM and in 1 after cyclophosphamide/thiotepa. There were no incidences of TA-TMA after Bu/Mel regimen. Six of 13 patients with TA-TMA and MOF received terminal complement blocker eculizumab for therapy. They all recovered organ function and received planned post-transplant therapy. Out of seven patients who did not get eculizumab, two died from TA-TMA complications and four progressed to ESRD. We conclude that the CEM regimen is associated with a high incidence of clinically significant TA-TMA after aHCT and eculizumab can be safe and effective treatment option to remediate TA-TMA associated MOF.
Eculizumab inhibits terminal complement-mediated intravascular hemolysis in patients with paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria and complement-mediated thrombotic microangiopathy (TMA) in patients with atypical hemolytic uremic syndrome and is now used as a first-line therapy in these diseases. Eculizumab is available only through a restricted program under a Risk Evaluation and Mitigation Strategy (REMS) because of an increased risk of meningococcal infections in persons without adequate functional complement. Administration of meningococcal vaccine is required at least 2 weeks before administering the first dose of eculizumab, and this advice is included in the product label. Eculizumab use for treatment of TMA in hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT) recipients brings a significant dilemma regarding REMS required meningococcal vaccination. TMA after HSCT usually occurs within the first 100 days after transplantation when patients are severely immunocompromised and are not able to mount a response to vaccines. We evaluated 30 HSCT recipients treated with eculizumab for high-risk TMA without meningococcal vaccine. All patients received antimicrobial prophylaxis adequate for Neisseria meningitides during eculizumab therapy and for 8 weeks after discontinuation of the drug. Median time to TMA diagnosis was 28 days after transplant (range, 13.8 to 48.5). Study subjects received a median of 14 eculizumab doses (range, 2 to 38 doses) for HSCT-associated TMA therapy. There were no incidences of meningococcal infections. The incidences of bacterial and fungal bloodstream infections were similar in patients treated with eculizumab (n = 30) as compared with those with HSCT-associated TMA who did not receive any complement blocking therapy (n = 39). Our data indicate that terminal complement blockade in the early post-transplant period can be performed without meningococcal vaccination while using appropriate antimicrobial prophylaxis until complement function is restored after therapy completion.
• Vitamin A levels below the median at day 30 posttransplant are associated with increased cumulative incidence of GI GVHD in children.• Potential mechanisms include increased intestinal permeability and increased lymphocyte homing to the intestine.Vitamin A promotes development of mucosal tolerance and enhances differentiation of regulatory T cells. Vitamin A deficiency impairs epithelial integrity, increasing intestinal permeability. We hypothesized that higher vitamin A levels would reduce the risk of graftversus-host disease (GVHD) through reduced gastrointestinal (GI) permeability, reduced mucosal injury, and reduced lymphocyte homing to the gut. We tested this hypothesis in a cohort study of 114 consecutive patients undergoing allogeneic stem cell transplant. Free vitamin A levels were measured in plasma at day 30 posttransplant. GI GVHD was increased in patients with vitamin A levels below the median (38% vs 12.4% at 100 days, P 5 .0008), as was treatment-related mortality (17.7% vs 7.4% at 1 year, P 5 .03). Bloodstream infections were increased in patients with vitamin A levels below the median (24% vs 8% at 1 year, P 5 .03), supporting our hypothesis of increased intestinal permeability. The GI mucosal intestinal fatty acid-binding protein was decreased after transplant, confirming mucosal injury, but was not correlated with vitamin A levels, indicating that vitamin A did not protect against mucosal injury. Expression of the gut homing receptor CCR9 on T-effector memory cells 30 days after transplant was increased in children with vitamin A levels below the median (r 5 20.34, P 5 .03). Taken together, these data support our hypothesis that low levels of vitamin A actively promote GI GVHD and are not simply a marker of poor nutritional status or a sicker patient. Vitamin A supplementation might improve transplant outcomes. (Blood. 2017;129(20):2801-2807
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