HLA-haploidentical bone marrow transplantation with posttransplant cyclophosphamide expands the donor pool for patients with sickle cell disease

Javier Bolaños-Meade, Ephraim J Fuchs, Leo Luznik, Sophie M Lanzkron, Christopher J Gamper, Richard J Jones, Robert A Brodsky, Javier Bolaños-Meade, Ephraim J Fuchs, Leo Luznik, Sophie M Lanzkron, Christopher J Gamper, Richard J Jones, Robert A Brodsky

Abstract

Allogeneic marrow transplantation can cure sickle cell disease; however, HLA-matched donors are difficult to find, and the toxicities of myeloablative conditioning are prohibitive for most adults with this disease. We developed a nonmyeloablative bone marrow transplantation platform using related, including HLA-haploidentical, donors for patients with sickle cell disease. The regimen consisted of antithymocyte globulin, fludarabine, cyclophosphamide, and total body irradiation, and graft-versus-host disease prophylaxis with posttransplantation high-dose cyclophosphamide, mycophenolate mofetil, and tacrolimus or sirolimus. After screening 19 patients, we transplanted 17, 14 from HLA-haploidentical and 3 from HLA-matched related donors. Eleven patients engrafted durably. With a median follow-up of 711 days (minimal follow up 224 days), 10 patients are asymptomatic, and 6 patients are off immunosupression. Only 1 patient developed skin-only acute graft-versus-host disease that resolved without any therapy; no mortality was seen. Nonmyeloablative conditioning with posttransplantation high-dose cyclophosphamide expands the donor pool, making marrow transplantation feasible for most patients with sickle cell disease, and is associated with a low risk of complications, even with haploidentical related donors. Graft failure, 43% in haploidentical pairs, remains a major obstacle but may be acceptable in a fraction of patients if the majority can be cured without serious toxicities.

Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
Conditioning schema. Patients 1 and 2 did not receive ATG. Patients 1 to 10 received tacrolimus and patients 11 to 17 received sirolimus. Patients 15 to 17 received G-CSF–primed bone marrow (see “Protocol evolution”).

Source: PubMed

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