Long-Term Off-Line Extracorporeal Photochemotherapy in Patients with Chronic Lung Allograft Rejection Not Responsive to Conventional Treatment: A 10-Year Single-Centre Analysis

Claudia Del Fante, Luigia Scudeller, Tiberio Oggionni, Gianluca Viarengo, Francesca Cemmi, Monica Morosini, Alessandro Cascina, Federica Meloni, Cesare Perotti, Claudia Del Fante, Luigia Scudeller, Tiberio Oggionni, Gianluca Viarengo, Francesca Cemmi, Monica Morosini, Alessandro Cascina, Federica Meloni, Cesare Perotti

Abstract

Background: Extracorporeal photochemotherapy (ECP) for chronic lung allograft dysfunction (CLAD) has been reported as beneficial in a few short-term studies.

Objectives: In this retrospective cohort study on 48 CLAD patients treated by ECP (off-line technique) for a period of >8 years (compared to 58 controls), we explored potential predictors of survival and response.

Methods: Failures were defined as a decrease in forced expiratory volume in 1 s (FEV1) of >10% from ECP initiation.

Results: ECP patients were enrolled between February 2003 and December 2013; 14 (29.2%) with restrictive allograft syndrome (RAS) and 34 with bronchiolitis obliterans syndrome. Grade 1 severity was indicated in 58.3%, grade 2 in 20.8%, and grade 3 in 20.8% of patients. The median follow-up was 65 months (cumulative 2,284.4 person-months). Twenty (41.7%) patients died, including 17 (85%) CLAD-related deaths. Among the controls, there were 42 deaths (72.4%), of which 32 (76.2%) were CLAD related, over a median of 51 months (cumulative 3,066.5 person-months; p = 0.09). Among ECP patients, the FEV1 slope flattened out after a decline in the initial months (slope -19 ml/month in months 0-6, +4 in months 36-48 and later; p = 0.001). RAS was associated with poorer survival, whereas a 'rapid decline in the previous 6 months' was not. No ECP side effects or complications were observed.

Conclusion: Long-term ECP for CLAD is safe and reduces FEV1 decline over time; the RAS phenotype might show a poorer response. ECP deserves to be evaluated in a randomized controlled trial.

© 2015 S. Karger AG, Basel.

Source: PubMed

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