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  • Bonini, Chiara  (13)
  • Morelli, Mara  (13)
  • 1
    In: Blood, American Society of Hematology, Vol. 128, No. 22 ( 2016-12-02), p. 5810-5810
    Abstract: Introduction Tyrosine kinase inhibitor (TKi) has become the standard of care in patients (pts) with chronic myeloid leukemia (CML) and an unavoidable tool in the combined therapy for pts with Philadelphia chromosome positive (Ph+) acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL). Nevertheless, because of resistance to TKI and side-effects, allogeneic stem cell transplantation (HSCT) remains the standard therapy of ALL Ph+ and of CML pts failing 1st line therapy with TKi, with failure or insufficient response or intolerance or mutations resistant to 2nd generation TKI, or in the advanced phase at diagnosis (accelerated phase and blast crisis). Unfortunately, despite greater remission with the use of TKi pre-transplant, HSCT transplant outcome have not improved largely due to high incidence of relapse after transplant. In the past decade several multi-institutional studies confirmed the feasibility and safety of post-HSCT imatinib administration as prophylactic or therapeutic strategy. Second and 3rd generation TKi administration after HSCT - targeting mutational status and according to pre-HSCT activity - is today under investigation. Methods Here we are reporting our experience in post-HSCT treatment with the 3rd generation TKi ponatinib in 5 pts (4 CML, 1 ALL Ph+) treated between 2011 and 2016 at our Institution. Pts data and information were collected from Institutional database and chapters revision. A written consent was given by pts allowing the use of medical records for research in accordance with the Declaration of Helsinki. Results Pts and diseases features are reported in table 1. Stem cell source was peripheral blood in all cases, 3 pts were transplanted from a family mismatched donor (haplo), 1 from a family matched donor, 1 from a matched unrelated donor (MUD). The 3 haplo-transplanted pts previously underwent a MUD HSCT. All pts received a treosulfan based conditioning regimen and GvHD prophylaxis consisted on co-administration of MMF and rapamycin. Pre-transplant treatment for the ALL Ph+ consisted of chemotherapy combined with dasatinib, followed by a first MUD HSCT and dasatinib in maintenance. The patient relapsed 1 year after HSCT with documentation of mutation V299L. Ponatinib was introduced as salvage treatment to bridge second haplo HSCT. Pre-transplant treatment for the CML patients consisted of TKi therapy with combination of chemotherapy in case of uncontrolled progression of disease. Two pts received a first MUD HSCT but relapsed respectively 5 months and 4 years later. Four pts received ponatinib 45 mg daily before the last HSCT: one patient achieved sustained major molecular response, 3 pts obtained transient response. All pts were presenting 2nd generation TKi resistant mutation (ref table 1). Ponatinib was started at a median time of 157 days after HSCT (range, 117-583): in 3 cases as salvage treatment in overt relapse, while in one case as prophylaxis and one case as preemptive therapy. Acute GvHD was diagnosed in 4 pts before ponatinib administration, 2 of them also experienced chronic GvHD. No new cases of GvHD were observed after initiation of ponatinib. Immunosuppressive treatment and azoles treatment were discontinued before ponatinib in all but one patient who was under combined treatment for chronic GvHD: therapeutic drug monitoring was closely performed without evidence drug-drug interaction. Pts were regularly evaluated for toxicities. No serious adverse events were reported in our experience: we administered ponatinib at a median maximum dosage of 30 mg daily (range, 15-45 mg), for a median of 24 weeks (range, 4 - 116 weeks). Two pts required anti hypertension drugs. One patient was closely monitored for multifactorial liver cholestasis never requiring ponatinib discontinuation. At last evaluation one patient maintained the status of molecularly undetectable leukemia (follow-up post HSCT 30 months) and two pts obtained molecular response (follow-up post HSCT 25 months and 5 months). Two patients who received therapeutic ponatinib in overt relapse didn't respond and died for progressive disease. Conclusions Ponatinib is safe and well tolerated as bridge to HSCT and to maintain the disease control after transplant. Prophylaxis targeted therapy and pre-emptive therapy with ponatinib may lead the reduction of disease relapse for high-risk Ph+ leukemia. Disclosures Bonini: Molmed SpA: Consultancy; TxCell: Membership on an entity's Board of Directors or advisory committees. Ciceri:MolMed SpA: Consultancy.
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    ISSN: 0006-4971 , 1528-0020
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    Publication Date: 2016
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  • 2
    In: Blood, American Society of Hematology, Vol. 128, No. 22 ( 2016-12-02), p. 3442-3442
    Abstract: Introduction Voriconazoleis a second-generationtriazolebroad-spectrum antifungal agent indicated in adults and children aged 2 years and above as treatment of invasive aspergillosis, treatment ofcandidaemiain non-neutropenic patients (pts), treatment of fluconazole-resistant serious invasive Candida infections, treatment of serious fungal infections caused byScedosporiumspp. and Fusarium spp. Voriconazoleis associated with a broad spectrum of dermatologically adverse reactions: it seems to be responsible for a multistep process beginning with acute and chronicphototoxicity, followed by actinic keratosis (AK), and finally skin squamous cell carcinoma (SCC), especially if therapy is maintained. Strictphotoprotectionis mandatory; drug replacement by anothertriazolemust be discussed in case of acutephototoxicity.Voriconazolemust be stopped in pts with chronicphototoxicity, and a long-term dermatologic follow-up of skin lesions is required even after withdrawal. It is now established thatvoriconazoleis an independent risk factor for the development of cutaneous malignancy in lung transplant recipients. Recently, a retrospective study from the Mayo Clinic (WojenskiDJ et al, Transplant Infectious Disease 2015, 17, 250-58) confirmed the association betweenvoriconazoleand SCC also after allo-HSCT (allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation) and identified cumulative days ofvoriconazoleas a risk factor for SCC. Methods The current study seeks to analyze the correlation betweenvoriconazoleexposure and non-melanoma skin cancer (NMSC) in our Center, where it is available an intensive dedicated follow-up after allo-HSCT to prevent and early detect second solid tumors. Results We analyze data prospectively collected at our Long-Term Follow-Up clinic between 2011 and 2016 including 302 adult pts with a minimum follow-up of 24 months. A written consent was given by pts allowing the use of medical records for research in accordance with the Declaration of Helsinki. Baseline characteristics of the 302 pts are outlined in table 1. In total, 25 pts developed NMSC - median time from allo-HSCT 42 months (range, 9 months - 20 years) - median follow-up after NMSC diagnosis 2 years (range, 2 months - 12 years). The estimated cumulative incidence of NMSC at 3 years was 3.2% and at 5 years 6.2%. At the dermatological annual evaluation 3 pts were presenting AK, only one progress to basal cell carcinoma (BCC), the 2 pts with AK are under dermatological follow-up. All pts were treated withvoriconazolefor more than 180 days. In total 19 pts were diagnosed with BCC and 6 pts with SCC. Five pts with SCC and 17 with BCC were treated withvoriconazole, overall 16/22 (4 SCC) for more than 180 days. All pts were treated according to standard practice for NMSC, unfortunately 1 pts deceased due to SCC progression. Only 2 pts were diagnosed and treated for NMSC before transplantation. Six pts had antecedent acute GvHD and 8 pts had antecedent moderate to severe chronic GvHD. History ofvoriconazoleexposure, cumulative days ofvoriconazoleuse, gender, age at transplant, TBI based conditioning regimen, acute/chronic GvHD and skin cancer pre-transplant were considered for analysis. Age at transplant above 48 years (p 〈 0.0001),voriconazoleexposure (p 0.0088) and cumulative days ofvoriconazoleexposure greater than 180 days (p 0.0038) were associated with higher risk of NMSC. Conclusions Our experience confirms the correlation betweenvoriconazoleand occurrence of NMSC after allo-HSCT. Incidence of NMSC is higher than previously reported in registry reports, and the occurrence of NMSC in pts exposed tovoriconazoleseems to be precocious. This observation confirms the relevance of counseling and prevention of NMSC in patients benefiting fromvoriconazoleas a crucialmold-active antifungal prophylaxis and treatment. Disclosures Bonini: Molmed SpA: Consultancy; TxCell: Membership on an entity's Board of Directors or advisory committees. Ciceri:MolMed SpA: Consultancy.
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    ISSN: 0006-4971 , 1528-0020
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    Publisher: American Society of Hematology
    Publication Date: 2016
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  • 3
    In: Blood, American Society of Hematology, Vol. 126, No. 23 ( 2015-12-03), p. 4362-4362
    Abstract: Introduction Allogeneic hematopoietic cell transplantation (HCT) is an effective therapeutic option for high-risk hematological malignancies; 80% of those who survive the first 2 years are expected to become long-term survivors. The prevalence of chronic health conditions approaches 75% among HCT survivors and that for severe or life-threatening conditions exceeds 20%. Patients and Methods A standardized follow-up of HCT survivors is applied at our Center, according to Jacie Standards. Here we report the analysis of data collected between July 2014 and July 2015 in 260 adult patients (pts) who underwent an HCT between 1992 and 2014. Data on 7 items - selected to monitor relevant comorbidities - were prospectively collected in our Institutional database. A written consent was given by pts allowing the use of medical records for research in accordance with the Declaration of Helsinki. Results Pts characteristics are reported in table 1, median time of follow-up 4.4y (r1-22), cumulative follow-up 1404y; 13 pts deceased during the time of observation (6 due to disease relapse, 2 to late major infection, 2 to second cancer, 1 to GvHD, 1 to myocardial infarction, 1 unknown). - chronic Graft-versus-Host-Disease (c-GvHD): at a median follow-up of 43 months (r 16 months - 21 years) 84 (32%) pts are presenting c-GvHD features. According to NIH 2014 consensus criteria 23 cases were classified as mild, 32 moderate, 29 severe. Median number of involved organs 2 (r1-5), 39 pts were experiencing skin lesions, 55 eyes, 28 mouth, 19 joint and fascia, 18 lungs. Topical therapy was the treatment of choice for mild cases, while moderate and severe were treated with systemic therapy. The partnership with the lung specialist and the ophthalmologist was crucial for the management of lung and eyes GvHD. - Late infectious manifestation: 38 (15%) pts present late infection, 2 pts deceased due to major events. Of note pneumonia was reported in 12 pts, Varicella Zoster virus reactivation in 7, CMV late reactivation in 4 pts. - Second cancer screening was performed according to international guidelines. The incidence of new cases is 10% (26 pts) and 11 pts are actually under work-up for suspicious lesions. Non-melanoma skin cancer was the most frequent diagnosis (13 cases); 3 pts were diagnosed with cervix cancer, 2 with lung cancer. The prevalence of second cancer in our population is 18% (47 cases). All pts were treated according to standard for general population, 45/47 are alive. - Cardiovascular diseases were frequently observed in our setting: hypertension was documented in 36 pts, arterial diseases in 10 pts, cardiomyopathy in 28 pts. Overall 27% of pts were diagnosed with cardiovascular comorbidities. - Metabolic syndrome (MS) is reported as a very common complication in long-term survivors: 65 (25%) pts were presenting features of MS (3/5 among hypertension, dyslipidemia, raised fasting glucose, and central obesity). A concomitant thyroid dysfunction - requiring hormonal replacement - was present in 27/65 pts. - Secondary hemosiderosis was documented (with MRI and blood parameters) and treated in 39 pts (15%) - 8 pts received deferasirox while phlebotomy was used in 31. - Osteoporosis and bone loss were evaluated measuring bone mineral density using dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry; osteopenia was detected in 81 pts and osteoporosis in 42 (47%). Pts were evaluated in conjunction with the endocrinologist and treated according to the fracture risk score. According to donor source no difference were observed (Chi-square test - p ns) except for higher incidence of moderate/severe GvHD incidence in HLA identical sibling (p 0.0097) as compared to alternative donors. Discussion HCT survivors are at a defined relevant risk of developing long-term complications that have a direct impact on the morbidity and mortality.A multidisciplinary active screening within routine HCT long-term follow-up care is mandatory to enhance early diagnosis/treatment and overall outcome. The next challenge will be to enhance the primary prevention to reduce the incidence of preventable comorbidities. Table 1. patients characteristics N (range) Pts 260 Age At transplant 48y (10 - 76) At follow-up 54y (20 - 82) Male / Female 169 / 91 Diagnosis AML / ALL 106 / 33 MDS 27 HD / NHL 23 / 29 MM 14 CML 8 CLL 5 SAA / EPN 4 / 1 Others 10 Status at transplant CR / PD 169 / 91 Donor Haploidentical 100 HLA identical Sibling 76 Match Unrelated Donor 82 Cord Blood 2 Disclosures Bonini: MolMed S.p.A: Consultancy.
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    ISSN: 0006-4971 , 1528-0020
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    Language: English
    Publisher: American Society of Hematology
    Publication Date: 2015
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  • 4
    In: Biology of Blood and Marrow Transplantation, Elsevier BV, Vol. 22, No. 12 ( 2016-12), p. 2250-2255
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    ISSN: 1083-8791
    Language: English
    Publisher: Elsevier BV
    Publication Date: 2016
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    detail.hit.zdb_id: 2057605-5
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  • 5
    In: Blood, American Society of Hematology, Vol. 128, No. 22 ( 2016-12-02), p. 2221-2221
    Abstract: Background In an effort to reduce transplantation-related morbidity and mortality in patients (pts) undergoing total body irradiation as part of myeloablative conditioning regimen for hematological malignancies candidated to allogeneic transplant, data have been emerging in support of Helical Tomotherapy to deliver radiation doses to target organs, as bone marrow and lymph nodes, sparing normal organs. We report the first results of feasibility and efficacy of myeloablative Treosulfan-based conditioning chemotherapy combined with dose-escalating (8-10-12 Gy) TMI in pts affected by chemosensitive advanced MM (TrRaMM-TMI: Eudract N° 2013-002479-16). Patients and methods Ten pts (7 females and 3 males with a median age of 60 years), affected by chemosensitive advanced MM have been treated from December 2012 to December 2015. Most of them have received previous therapies with Bortezomib (90%) and IMIDs (80%) and all pts experienced relapse after autologous transplant; active disease was present in the 30% of the pts at the time of the transplant. The pts' median score of HCT-comorbidity index was 2. All pts received a myeloablative Treosulfan-based chemotherapy (Treosulfan 14g/mq/day on days -6 to -4; Fludarabine 30mg/mq/day on days -6 to-2), combined with TMI delivery on day -2 and -1 if 8Gy and on day -3, -2 and -1 if 10 Gy or 12 Gy, using Helical Tomotherapy. Each pt had a personalized immobilization device and before any fraction the correct set-up was controlled by a mega-voltage CT scan. Three pts have been submitted as pilot cases to TMI 8 Gy, and four and three pts respectively in the two protocol cohorts of TMI 10 Gy and 12 Gy. Peripheral-blood has been the stem cell source for all the pts: three from a matched sibling donor and seven from a matched unrelated donor (10/10 HLA match in six cases and one 9/10 HLA match). A median of 5x10e6 Cd34+/kg and of 319x10e6 Cd3+/Kg have been infused and graft versus host disease (GVHD) prophylaxis with sirolimus and mycophenolate mofetil has been administered; antithymocyte globulin on days -4 to -2 and rituximab on day -1 were added in the unrelated transplant setting. Results All pts received the planned TMI dose in each cohort; engraftment occurred in all pts and no secondary graft failure was observed. No grade 3 and 4 extra-hematological toxicities were observed, and lower grade toxicities, especially gastrointestinal, were completely reversible. No more than 10% of viral reactivations have been demonstrated and one case only of severe sepsis occurred, promptly resolved. No invasive fungal infections occured. No transplant related mortality (TRM) was registered and the two deaths were due to progressive disease. Immune reconstitution after transplant described a T-cell CD8+ and CD4+ repertoire recovery with a median number of 350/microL and of 100/microL on day +90 respectively; NK cells recovery was rapid with a median of 140/microL on day +90, while B cells were still missing on day +90. With a median follow-up time of 22 months on surviving pts, a 2-year PFS of 64% and a 2-year OS of 77% have been described. The day +100 cumulative incidence of grade II-IV acute GVHD was 40%; if grade 〉 III 10%; chronic GVHD 1-year cumulative incidence was 42%; if moderate and severe 31%. 2-year relapse incidence was 36%. Conclusions The first data coming out from the present experience show that TMI addition to Treosulfan-based chemotherapy has not demonstrated an addition of at least short-term toxicities, confirming the combination feasibility, so that TMI 14 Gy delivery is in the plan for the third cohort of the study. Moreover the efficacy outcomes in terms of survival and acceptable TRM, suggest that myeloablative conditioning is feasible in the context of MM and especially promising even in pts with advanced and heavily pretreated disease. Disclosures Bonini: Molmed SpA: Consultancy; TxCell: Membership on an entity's Board of Directors or advisory committees. Ciceri:MolMed SpA: Consultancy.
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    Publication Date: 2016
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  • 6
    In: Blood, American Society of Hematology, Vol. 126, No. 23 ( 2015-12-03), p. 5465-5465
    Abstract: Allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (allo-HSCT) is the only cure for several patients with high-risk hematological malignancies. Recent advances in supportive therapies have significantly reduced the treatment-related mortality over the last decades. Nevertheless graft-versus-host disease (GvHD) still represents a major complication, and research is needed to achieve further progress in this area of transplantation. Moreover, although initial studies suggested relative equivalence, recent and large prospective studies showed higher rates of acute and chronic GvHD, and worse survival in allo-HSCT from unrelated donors (URD) compared with HLA-identical sibling donors. Following our encouraging results in haplodentical setting with the more recently post-transplantation cyclophosphamide (PTCy) and sirolimus as GvHD prophylaxis (Cieri et al, 2015), in this study we investigated whether the incorporation of low dose anti-thymocyte globulin (ATG) to PTCy and sirolimus GvHD prophylactic approach, may alleviate some of the increased alloreactivity associated with URD transplants. We retrospectively evaluated a cohort of 21 haematological patients receiving URD allo-HSCT in the San Raffaele Haematology and BMT Unit, from 2013 to 2015. All subjects had high-risk hematologic malignancies, with the most common diagnosis being myeloid diseases (52%). A total of 11 patients had active disease at HSCT, while 9 were in hematologic remission. Nine patients scored high according to disease risk index defined by Armand et al, 10 scored intermediate, while only 2 had a low disease score. Myeloablative conditioning consisted of treosulfan (14 g/m2/day) on days -6 to -4, fludarabine (30 mg/m2/day) on days -6 to -2, and melphalan (70 mg/m2/day) on days -2 and -1, followed by T-replete G-CSF-mobilized PBSCs (n=19) or BM grafts (n=2). Whether 12 patients received stem cells from HLA- matched URD (fully 10/10 HLA matched), the remaining 9 had one-locus HLA-mismatched from their donors. During conditioning patients received ATG-Fresenius 5 mg/kg per day IV on day -4 to -2. In vivo B-cell depletion was obtained by rituximab (i.v. 375mg/m2 given as a single dose on day -1). Postgrafting immunosuppression consisted of PTCy (50 mg/kg/day) on days 3 and 4. Sirolimus was given orally from day 5, and monitored to maintain a target therapeutic plasma level of 5-14 ng/ml. According to chimeric status and evidence of GVHD, the dosage of sirolimus was tapered during the second month post-transplantation, ending in complete withdrawal within the sixth month after HSCT. Mycophenolate mofetil (MMF) was initiated orally at 10 mg/kg t.i.d. on day 5 after HSCT, and withdrawn on day 30. Median follow up was 247 days (range 29-486) from HSCT. All patients were engrafted in a median time of 17 days (range, 14-51 days), with full donor chimerism achieved by day 30. Poor graft function was observed in 11 patients. Post-HSCT recovery of lymphocyte subsets was lengthy as compared to other unmanipulated HSCT, with a median time to CD3 〉 100/ml of 41 days (range, 22-389 days) by flow-cytometry, while 5 patients never reached immune reconstitution. All except one developed febrile neutropenia during aplasia. We observed a high rate of serious infections: severe pneumonia in 7 cases (5 required NIV, 4 were admitted to ICU), CMV reactivation in 13 (3 CMV disease), HHV6 reactivation in 10, BK virus haemorrhagic cystitis in 2 patients. Although the overall mortality associated with these complications was limited, as evidenced by a favourable NRM, it caused significant morbidity in patients and often required aggressive therapies, potentially contributing to poor graft function. The incidences of acute and chronic GVHD were low. A grade II-IV acute GvHD was reported in 10% patients, while five patients developed chronic GvHD (mild in 4 cases, only one moderate). Non-relapse mortality (NRM) at 100 days and 1 year was 4.8% and 20.7%, respectively. The estimated 1-year overall survival (OS) and relapse incidence were 51% and 22.5% respectively. Although limited by a small number of patients with relatively short follow-up, our study suggests that URD allo-HSCT with ATG, PTCy and sirolimus-based GvHD prophylaxis, can be very effective in preventing GvHD, but at the expense of delayed immune reconstitution and high rate of infectious complications, while warranting acceptable NRM and relapse incidence. Disclosures Bonini: MolMed S.p.A: Consultancy.
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  • 7
    In: Blood, American Society of Hematology, Vol. 124, No. 21 ( 2014-12-06), p. 2584-2584
    Abstract: Introduction:Haploidentical hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT) performed using T–replete BM grafts and post-transplantation cyclophosphamide (PT-Cy) has gained much interest in the transplantation community for the excellent toxicity profile, achieving outcomes equivalent to those of HSCT performed using matched related or unrelated donors (Bashey, JCO 2013). Nonetheless, relapse remains a major challenge with the use of this non-myeloablative regimen (Luznik, BBMT 2008). Thus, we investigated whether the use of PBSC graft, an intensified myeloablative conditioning and sirolimus instead of tacrolimus might help increasing the therapeutic index of this procedure. Patients and Methods:Here we report the results on 39 patients treated between Nov 2012 and June 2014. The median age was 56 years (range, 21–78). Diagnoses included AML (21), ALL (5), CML-BC (1), MDS (1), NHL (5), and HD (6). The majority (62%) of patients were not in disease remission at time of HSCT. Eight patients (20%) received a prior allo-HSCT. For the remaining patients who underwent haplo-PTCy as a first allogeneic transplant, 19 patients (61%) scored high/very high according to the CIBMTR disease score, 12 (39%) scored intermediate, while no patient had a low disease score. The median Sorror Comorbidity Index was 3 (range: 0-9). Conditioning consisted of treosulfan (14 g/m2/day) on days –6 to –4, fludarabine (30 mg/m2/day) on days –6 to –2, and melphalan (70 mg/m2/day) on days –2 and –1, followed by T-replete G-CSF-mobilized PBSC. Postgrafting immunosuppression consisted of PT-Cy (50 mg/kg/day) on days 3 and 4, followed by mycophenolate mofetil for 30 days, and sirolimus for at least 3 months. Overall survival (OS) and disease-free survival (DFS) were estimated using the Kaplan-Meier method. Cumulative incidence (CI) of non-relapse mortality (NRM) was calculated using relapse as a competing risk, for GvHD the competing risk was death. Results:PBSC grafts contained an infused median CD34/kg of 6.03 e6 (4.15–8.02 e7), CD3/kg 21.12 e7 (10.5–48.26 e7). All patients but 1 engrafted (97.5%), with a median time to neutrophil and platelet recovery of 18 days (range 13–45) and 19 days (9–65), respectively. Notably, the only patient with primary graft failure had a HLA-DP mismatch in HvG direction. Post-HSCT recovery of lymphocyte subsets was broad and fast: median time to CD3 〉 100/ml was 28 days (range: 8-97), to CD4 〉 200/ml 35 days (21-137) and to CD19 〉 0/ml 34 days (24-137). Circulating T cells comprised naïve and memory subsets, with a recovery of CD31+ recent thymic emigrants (RTEs) starting from day 30. All patients had a significantly higher proportion of circulating RTEs at day 30, 90 and 180 compared to their pre-HSCT levels, suggesting an improvement in their thymic function after HSCT. We observed a significant early increase in circulating Tregs at day 15 post HSCT. With a median follow-up for living patients of 327 days, the 1-year cumulative CI of NRM and relapse were 15% and 32%, respectively. Two of the 9 relapses were HLA-loss variants (Vago, NEJM 2009) occurring at a median time of 277 days post-HSCT. Classical relapses had instead an earlier occurrence (median time to relapse: 92 days, range 37-134). CI of acute GvHD grade II-IV and III-IV at 6 months were 18% and 8%, while CI of chronic GvHD at 12 months was 19%. Estimated 1-year probability of OS and DFS were 58% and 51%. Outcomes were particularly favorable in patients transplanted in CR (1-year OS 93%, DFS 95%) as compared to those of patients transplanted with active disease (1-year OS 37%, DFS 29%; p=0.005 and p=0.001, respectively). Importantly, stratification according to CIBMTR score held similar results: in patients with intermediate score, 1-year OS was 91% vs. 33% in patients with high/very high score (p=0.015); similarly, 1-year DFS was 92% vs. 34% (p=0.009). Conclusions: PT-Cy coupled to sirolimus allow the use of haploidentical PBSC grafts with low rates of GvHD, and intensified myeloablative regimen is a valid option for patients with aggressive/advanced hematologic malignancies. The acceptable rates of GvHD and NRM as well as the favorable immune reconstitution profile open the way for combining it with novel immunomodulatory or cellular therapies to improve DFS in patients at high risk for relapse who would benefit from further treatment intensification early after transplant. Disclosures Bonini: MolMed S.p.A.: Consultancy.
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    Publication Date: 2014
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  • 8
    In: Blood, American Society of Hematology, Vol. 124, No. 21 ( 2014-12-06), p. 3899-3899
    Abstract: BACKGROUND: Human herpesvirus type 6 (HHV-6) is increasingly recognized as an opportunistic and potentially life-threatening pathogen in recipients of allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (AlloSCT). HHV-6 is a member of the beta herpesvirus subfamily (genus Roseolovirus). HHV-6 infection is recognized as the cause of a febrile disease and exanthem subitum in early childhood. Approximately 60% of solid organ transplant and 40% of patients after alloSCT experienced HHV-6 reactivation. Reported clinical manifestations of HHV-6 infection in transplanted patients are skin rash, interstitial pneumonia, bone marrow suppression and encephalitis. Moreover, some clinical reports suggest that HHV-6 can facilitate the occurrence of severe clinical complications of alloSCT, increasing transplant-related mortality. METHODS: From January 2009 to February 2013, we retrospectively evaluated 54 consecutive adult patients (median age 50 years) who developed positivity to HHV-6 after alloSCT for high-risk hematological malignancies. Stem cell donors were family haploidentical (37), HLA identical sibling (8), unrelated volunteer (6), cord blood (3). The viral load was determined by quantitative PCR (Nanogen Advanced Diagnostic S.r.L) in cell-free body fluids such as plasma, bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL), cerebrospinal fluid (CSF), bone marrow (BM) aspirates or in gastrointestinal biopsies. RESULTS: Median time from alloSCT to HHV-6 reactivation was 34 days (range: 0-705). Thirty-one patients presented HHV-6 positive in plasma, 9/54 in BM, 33/54 in gut biopsies or BAL, 7/54 in CSF. At the time of viral positivity all pts were receiving acyclovir as viral prophylaxis except five. Twenty-nine patients had acute graft versus host disease (GvHD). Twenty-two out of these twenty-nine patients experienced a grade III-IV acute GvHD, requiring high dose steroids in twenty-six cases. A concomitant CMV positivity was detected in 15/54 patients. The median absolute count of CD3+ lymphocytes was 207 cells/mcl. In 52/54 cases we reported HHV-6 clinical manifestations: fever (43), skin rash (22), hepatitis (19), diarrhoea (24), encephalitis (10), BM suppression (18), delayed engraftment (11). HHV-6 positivity led to antiviral pharmacological treatment in 37/54 cases, using as first choice therapy foscarnet. Amongst the total fifty-four patients with documented HHV-6 positivity thirty-one solved the clinical event. However the mortality rate was relatively high in this population (overall survival (OS) ±SE at 1 year after HHV-6 reactivation was 38% ± 7%), mainly related to severe infections or GvHD. A better OS is significantly associated with CD3+ cells ≥200/mcl at the time of HHV-6 reactivation (fig 1) (OS at 1 year 63% compared to 11% for patients with CD3 〈 200/mcl; HR: 0.27, 95% CI 0.12-0.54, p=0.0002). The overall survival of these patients was also positively affected by the absence of acute GvHD grade III-IV at time of viral reactivation (HR: 0.03, 95% CI 1.08-4.03, p=0.03) and by the complete disease remission at time of HSCT (HR:0.26, 95% CI 0.07-0.89, p=0.03). In this analysis the overall survival was not significantly influenced by steroids administration (HR: 1.36, 95% CI 0.71-2.60, p=0.36), time after alloSCT (HR: 1.30, 95% CI 0.51-3.33, p=0.59), type of antiviral prophylaxis (HR: 1.02, 95% CI 0.45-2.33, p=0.96), plasma viral load (HR:1.18, 95% CI 0.51-2.76, p=0.69) and organ involvement (HR:1.14, 95% CI 0.59-2.20, p=0.70). CONCLUSIONS: This retrospective study confirms a correlation of HHV-6 with high morbidity and mortality rates after alloSCT, thus suggesting a regular HHV-6 monitoring in alloSCT recipients. The regular monitoring of HHV-6 DNA, using a real-time PCR assay, may be useful for identifying active HHV-6 infection and for the introduction of a pre-emptive treatment, possibly reducing the incidence of the most severe clinical complications. Despite HHV-6 detection typically occurred early after alloSCT, a better immune reconstitution has the potential to improve clinical outcome. Figure 1: Overall survival after alloSCT in HHV-6 positive patients: green line showed patients with more than 200/mcl CD3+ cells, blue line the ones with less than 200/mcl CD3+ cells at HHV-6 reactivation. P value is provided by Log Rank test. Figure 1:. Overall survival after alloSCT in HHV-6 positive patients: green line showed patients with more than 200/mcl CD3+ cells, blue line the ones with less than 200/mcl CD3+ cells at HHV-6 reactivation. P value is provided by Log Rank test. Disclosures Bonini: MolMed S.p.A.: Consultancy.
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    ISSN: 0006-4971 , 1528-0020
    RVK:
    RVK:
    Language: English
    Publisher: American Society of Hematology
    Publication Date: 2014
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    detail.hit.zdb_id: 80069-7
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  • 9
    In: Blood, American Society of Hematology, Vol. 122, No. 21 ( 2013-11-15), p. 4539-4539
    Abstract: Human herpesvirus type 6 (HHV-6) is a member of the beta herpesvirus subfamily (genus Roseolovirus) and two distinct variants have been described: types A and B. HHV-6 infection is recognized as the cause of a febrile disease and exanthem subitum in early childhood. The infection rarely causes serious events in healthy individuals, but viral reactivation in immunocompromised patients is frequently associated with severe clinical manifestations. Above all HHV-6 is increasingly recognized as an opportunistic and potentially life-threatening pathogen in recipients of allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (AlloSCT). Approximately 60% of solid organ transplant and 40% of patients undergoing alloSCT experience HHV-6 reactivation, mainly of variant B. Reported clinical manifestations of HHV-6 infection in transplanted patients are skin rash, interstitial pneumonia, bone marrow suppression and encephalitis. Moreover, some clinical reports suggest that HHV-6 can facilitate the occurrence of severe clinical complications of alloSCT, increasing transplant-related mortality. Methods From January 2009 to February 2013, we retrospectively evaluated 54 consecutive adult patients (median age 50 years) who developed positivity to HHV-6 after alloSCT for high-risk hematological malignancies. Stem cell donors were family haploidentical (37), HLA identical sibling (8), unrelated volunteer (6), cord blood (3). The viral load was determined by quantitative PCR (Nanogen Advanced Diagnostic S.r.L) in cell-free body fluids such as plasma, bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL), cerebrospinal fluid (CSF), bone marrow (BM) aspirates or in gastrointestinal biopsies. Results Median time from alloSCT to HHV-6 reactivation was 34 days (range: 0-705). Thirty-one patients presented HHV-6 positive in plasma, 9/54 in BM, 33/54 in gut biopsies or BAL, 7/54 in CSF. At the time of viral positivity all pts were receiving acyclovir as viral prophylaxis except five. Twenty-nine patients had acute graft versus host disease (GvHD). Twenty-two out of these twenty-nine patients experienced a grade III-IV acute GvHD, requiring high dose steroids in twenty-six cases. A concomitant CMV positivity was detected in 15/54 patients. The median absolute count of CD3+ lymphocytes was 262 cells/mcl. In 52/54 cases we reported HHV-6 clinical manifestations: fever (43), skin rash (22), hepatitis (19), diarrhoea (24), encephalitis (10), BM suppression (18), delayed engraftment (11). HHV-6 positivity led to antiviral pharmacological treatment in 37/54 cases, using as first choice therapy foscarnet. Amongst the total fifty-four patients with documented HHV-6 positivity thirty-one solved the clinical event. However the mortality rate was relatively high in this population (only 30% of patients were alive), mainly related to severe infections or GvHD. A better overall survival is significantly associated with CD3+ cells higher than 200/mcl (p-value 0.011) and time after alloSCT more than 2 months (p-value 0.035). In this analysis the overall survival was not significantly influenced by steroids administration, presence of acute GvHD, plasma viral load and organ involvement. Conclusions This retrospective study further demonstrates the correlation between HHV-6 reactivation and high morbidity and mortality rates in patients after alloSCT. Despite HHV-6 detection typically occurred in the first month after AlloSCT, a better immune reconstitution has the potential to improve the outcome. The regular monitoring of HHV-6 DNA, using a real-time PCR assay, may be useful for identifying active HHV-6 infection and for the introduction of a pre-emptive treatment, possibly reducing the incidence of the most severe clinical complications. Disclosures: Bonini: MolMed SpA: Consultancy.
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    ISSN: 0006-4971 , 1528-0020
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    RVK:
    Language: English
    Publisher: American Society of Hematology
    Publication Date: 2013
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  • 10
    In: Blood, American Society of Hematology, Vol. 122, No. 21 ( 2013-11-15), p. 2149-2149
    Abstract: Hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT) is so far the only potentially curative option for patients with aggressive hematological malignancies. Since many patients cannot find a suitable HLA-identical (related or unrelated) donor, it is essential to analyze the safety of alternative graft sources, such as haploidentical donors. The use of reduced-intensity conditioning regimens in patients with an advanced disease did not improve the outcome because of a higher incidence of relapse. Here we present an interim analysis of this phase II prospective clinical trial that investigates a new conditioning regimen for allogeneic HSCT based on a well established one (Fludarabine and Treosulfan) intensified adding 4 Gy TBI with the aim of maintaining an acceptable toxicity profile while reducing the incidence of relapse in high-risk patients (TrRaMM4Gy study, Eudract 2011-001534-42). Patients and Methods Ninety-six patients underwent allogeneic HSCT for AML (n=46), ALL (n=13), acute biphenotypic leukaemia (n=2), HD (n=8), NHL (n=7), MDS (n=6), Myelofibrosis (n=5), MM (n=4), CML (n=2), CMML (n=2) or CLL (n=1). The median age was 45 years (range 17-67). At the time of the transplantation most patients (n=76) were in advanced disease phase, while the remaining 20 patients were in early phase. Twenty-eight patients were enrolled for relapse after a previous allogeneic HSCT. Median time from diagnosis to transplantation was 443 days (range 56-5249). Median comorbodity index score (according to Sorror criteria) was 2 (range: 0-8). Sixty-two patients received the graft from haploidentical donors, 17 from MUD, 14 from HLA-identical sibling and 3 patients from a single cord blood unit. Median number of CD34+ and CD3+ cells/kg were 6.46 millions and 241 millions respectively. The conditioning regimen included Treosulfan (14 g/m2 for 3 days), Fludarabine (30 mg/m2 for 5 days) and 4 Gy TBI split in 2 fractions. Patients receiving HSCT from haploidentical donor (arm A) were also treated with ATG-Fresenius (10 mg/kg for 3 days) and Rituximab (200 mg/m2 in single dose), patients receiving HSCT from HLA-identical sibling, MUD or single cord blood unit and in early disease status (arm B) were also treated with ATG-Fresenius (5 mg/kg for 3 days) and Rituximab (200 mg/m2 in single dose), while patients receiving HSCT from HLA-identical sibling, MUD or single cord blood unit and in advanced disease status (arm C) did not receive any ATG or Rituximab. GvHD prophylaxis consisted of Sirolimus (target concentration 8-15 ng/ml, till day +60) and Mycophenolate Mofetil (10 mg/kg tid till day +30). Results Neutrophils engraftment was reported at a median time of 17 days (range: 9-46) in all 91 evaluable patients; five patients died of transplant-related causes (n=4) or disease progression (n=1) before day +15. Platelets engraftment occurred after a median time of 17 days (range: 4-153) in 75 patients (82%). At the first marrow evaluation on day +30 all the evaluable patients showed full donor chimerism, 77 patients (90%) were in complete remission and 9 were in stable disease or progression. After a median follow-up of 425 days, cumulative incidence of grade 2-4 and 3-4 aGvHD were 40% and 26% respectively. Cumulative incidence of moderate or severe cGvHD (according to NIH criteria) was 57%. Cumulative incidence of NRM at day +100 and +365 were 23% and 36% respectively; cumulative incidence of relapse at day +365 was 33%. Overall survival and progression-free survival 1 year after HSCT were 51% and 43% respectively. EBV reactivation occurred in 7 patients, but no PTLD was observed. Conclusions The new conditioning regimen we investigated proved to be feasible in this high-risk population. We did not observe any major difference in terms of NRM and aGvHD compared to the data from our previous trial (TrRaMM, Eudract 2007-5477-54) with similar inclusion criteria and patient characteristics, but a reduced-intensity conditioning regimen based on Treosulfan and Fludarabine. Interestingly, we observed a trend of lower relapse incidence, resulting in a better OS and PFS. The low toxicity profile of Treosulfan and Fludarabine should be considered as a myeloablative platform for further intensification; more studies are warranted in order to find the association for a conditioning regimen endowed with a low toxicity profile but still a strong anti-tumor activity. Disclosures: Bonini: MolMed SpA: Consultancy.
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    ISSN: 0006-4971 , 1528-0020
    RVK:
    RVK:
    Language: English
    Publisher: American Society of Hematology
    Publication Date: 2013
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    detail.hit.zdb_id: 80069-7
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