We analyzed the incidence, etiology, risk factors, and clinical management of hemorrhagic cystitis (HC) in 102 children who underwent allogeneic stem cell transplantation: 28 from matched siblings, 57 from unrelated donors, and 17 from mismatched relatives. Conditioning regimens consisted of high-dose chemotherapy (n=83) or total body irradiation (n=19). In all children, urine and plasma were prospectively screened for human polyomavirus (HPV; BK virus [BKV] and JC virus [JCV]) or adenovirus (AdV) DNA with a polymerase chain reaction-based assay. Viral DNA was detected in the urine of 56 children (54.9%): BKV in 48 (47%), JCV in 4 (3.9%), and AdV in 4 (3.9%). HC occurred in 26 children (25.5%), and viruria was detected in all of them: BKV in 21 (80.8%), AdV in 4 (14.4%), and JCV in 1 (3.8%). All patients with AdV viruria developed HC. The cumulative incidence of HC in patients with HPV viruria was 0.43. The only significant risk factor for HC in patients with HPV-positive urine was conditioning with high-dose chemotherapy. Twenty-two children were treated with cidofovir, with no significant toxicity. In all treated patients but 1, the clinical symptoms were moderate, and no HC-related death was observed. We conclude that virus-induced HC is a frequent complication after allogeneic hematopoietic cell transplantation. Treatment with cidofovir is feasible, and further studies are warranted to evaluate its activity in HC mediated by BKV or JCV.
Sterile alpha motif domain protein 9 (SAMD9) and its paralogue SAMD9-like (SAMD9L) are cytoplasmic proteins encoded by two juxtaposed single-exon genes on chromosome 7q21. They share a 60% amino acid sequence identity and likely originated from a duplication of a common ancestral gene 1 . Their function remains enigmatic; they have been linked to tumor suppression 2 , inflammation 3 , stress response 4 , development 4 , endosomal fusion 5,6 and protein translation 7,8 . Both proteins were also shown to function as restriction factors forming a cross-species barrier for poxvirus infection [9][10][11][12] . Structural analysis of these large proteins has been limited to homology modeling, which predicted identical domains in either protein (SAM, ALBA2, SIR2, P-loop/ NTPase and OB-fold) 13 . Moreover, these genes exhibit tight regulation during embryonic development and transition to ubiquitous expression levels in adult tissues 14,15 .Notably, Samd9l-haploinsufficient mice develop myeloid neoplasia mimicking human MDS with monosomy 7 5 . Several groups reported germline SAMD9 or SAMD9L mutations (SAMD9/9L mut ) underlying new human syndromes with a propensity for cytopenia, bone marrow failure (BMF) and MDS with non-random monosomy 7 or deletion of 7q 6,16-28 . SAMD9 mutations (SAMD9 mut ) were initially linked to a fatal, early-onset MIRAGE syndrome (myelodysplasia, infections, restriction of growth, adrenal hypoplasia, genital phenotypes and enteropathy) 6,29 . In contrast, SAMD9L mutations (SAMD9L mut ) were originally described in families with a progressive neurological phenotype, multi-lineage cytopenia and bone marrow hypoplasia (ataxia-pancytopenia syndrome) 16,17 . Recent reports broadened this spectrum and found missense SAMD9/9L mut in non-syndromic familial MDS [30][31][32][33] , truncating SAMD9L mut in children with autoinflammatory panniculitis resembling CANDLE
Summary. Immune reconstitution was studied prospectively in 66 children who underwent 77 haematopoietic cell transplantations (HCT): 46 autologous HCTs in 39 patients and 31 allogeneic HCTs in 27 patients. We studied the dynamic analysis of immune recovery with regard to potential factors affecting its speed, including age, type of HCT, diagnosis, graft-versus-host disease (GvHD) and cytomegalovirus (CMV) infection reactivation. Absolute counts of different lymphocyte subsets and immunoglobulin serum levels were determined in peripheral blood of patients on d )7 and +16, and then at various intervals up to 24 months post transplant. Common patterns of immune recovery after both allogeneic and autologous HCT were identified: (i) CD4 + CD45RO + peripheral T-cell expansion on d +16; (ii) inverted CD4 + :CD8 + ratio from d +30 onwards; (iii) rapid natural killer (NK) cell (CD16 ± CD56 + ) count normalization. We observed prolonged T-cell lymphopenia (CD3 + , CD3 + CD4 + , CD4 + CD45RA + ) until 24 months after autologous HCT, whereas in the allogeneic setting CD3 + CD4 + cells, including naive CD45RA + cells, returned to normal values at 9 months post transplant. Age > 10 years and coexistence of GvHD and CMV reactivation were associated with a substantial delay in T-(CD4 + , including CD45RA + ) and B-cell recovery after allogeneic HCT. Multidrug GvHD prophylaxis resulted in impaired T-(CD4 + , CD4 + CD45RA + ) and B-cell reconstitution only in the early phase after allogeneic HCT (up to 4 months). Our results demonstrated that T-cell recovery was severely impaired in children after autologous HCT. It should be emphasized that specific approaches to enhance immune reconstitution are necessary to control minimal residual disease and avoid the risk of infectious complications in the autologous setting. Thymic involution after allogeneic HCT seems to be associated with age and coexistence of GvHD and CMV reactivation.
Pediatric patients with refractory or relapsed metastatic neuroblastoma (NBL) have a poor prognosis despite autologous stem cell transplantation (SCT). Allogeneic SCT from a haploidentical donor has a remarkable alloreactive effect in patients with leukemia; thus, we evaluated this approach in children with very high-risk NBL. We analyzed data from 2 prospective phase I/II trials. A total of 26 patients with refractory (n = 5), metastatic relapsed (n = 20), or locally relapsed MYCN-positive (n = 1) NBL received a median of 17 × 10/kg T/B cell-depleted CD34 stem cells with 68 × 10/kg residual T cells and 107 × 10/kg natural killer cells. The conditioning regimen comprised melphalan, fludarabine, thiotepa, OKT3, and a short course of mycophenolate mofetil post-transplantation. Engraftment occurred in 96% of the patients. Event-free survival and overall survival at 5 years were 19% and 23%, respectively. No transplantation-related mortality was observed, and the single death was due to progression/subsequent relapse. The median duration of follow-up was 8.1 years. Patients in complete remission before SCT had a significantly better prognosis than those with residual tumor load (P < .01). All patients with progressive disease before SCT relapsed within 1 year. Grade II and grade III acute graft-versus-host disease (GVHD) occurred in 31% and 12% of the patients, respectively. Chronic limited and extensive GVHD occurred in 28% and 10%, respectively. Our data indicate that haploidentical SCT is a feasible treatment option that can induce long-term remission in some patients with NBL with tolerable side effects, and may enable the development of further post-transplantation therapeutic strategies based on the donor-derived immune system.
The aim of our study was to compare the results of unrelated donor (UD) peripheral blood stem cell transplantation versus UD bone marrow transplantation and to analyze the impact of infused CD34(+) and CD3(+) cell doses on survival and incidence of severe graft-versus-host disease (GVHD) in 187 children who underwent UD hematopoietic cell transplantation with the use of in vivo T cell depletion (antithymocyte globulin or CAMPATH-1H). HLA typing was performed at the "high-resolution" level. Patients receiving > or =10 x 10(6) CD34(+) cells/kg and > or =4 x 10(8) CD3(+) cells/kg had better overall and disease-free survival. Multivariate analysis has shown that both infused CD34(+) cell dose <10 x 10(6)/kg and CD3(+) cell dose <4 x 10(8)/kg were independent risk factors for mortality (relative risk [RR] 1.8 and 1.71, P = .009 and .016, respectively). Regarding disease-free survival, multivariate analysis has revealed another independent risk factor for poor outcome apart from the 2 earlier-mentioned cell doses, which was the use of donors mismatched at 2 HLA antigens or 3 HLA allele/antigens (RR 2.5, P = .004). In age groups 0-10 years and 10-20 years, CD34(+) cell doses higher than the age-adjusted median dose clearly favored survival. Higher infused doses of CD34(+) and CD3(+) cells did not result in an increased rate of severe GVHD. The use of mismatched donors was the only independent risk factor for the incidence of severe acute GVHD (RR 2.2, P = .046). The report demonstrates for the first time in a pediatric cohort, that higher doses of transplanted CD34(+) and CD3(+) cells lead to an improved survival without an increased risk of severe GVHD. The study findings may be limited to the population of patients receiving in vivo T cell depletion, which is now broadly used in unrelated donor setting in Europe.
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