Fludarabine, cyclophosphamide, and antithymocyte globulin for matched related and unrelated allogeneic stem cell transplant in severe aplastic anemia.
Article
Overview
abstract
Twenty severe aplastic anemia (SAA) patients underwent allogeneic stem cell transplantation (allo-SCT) with fludarabine (FLU), cyclophosphamide and antithymocyte globulin from a matched related (n=7, age ≥ 40) or unrelated donor (n=13, any age). Median age was 34 years (range 1–59). Median time from diagnosis to allo-SCT was 12 months (range 2–244). Seventeen out of 19 evaluable patients engrafted (90%). There were two secondary graft failures (10%). Median time to neutrophil recovery was 15 days (range 8–30). Chimerism studies indicated ≥90% donor-derived engraftment in 16/19 evaluable patients (75%). Four out of 20 patients (20%) developed acute (grade II–IV) GVHD, and 6/16 evaluable patients (37%) developed chronic GVHD. We observed EBV reactivation and viremia in seven patients, which was successfully treated with rituximab in all but one instance (where it was self-limiting). Thirteen patients (62%) are alive (including eight of the last nine treated) with a median follow-up of 30 months (range 3–112). Seven patients expired (graft rejection n=1, GVHD n=1, multiorgan failure n=1, infection n=2, EBV post-transplant lymphoproliferative disorder/PTLD n=2). Total body irradiation-free, FLU-based conditioning for matched related and unrelated allo-SCT is feasible with high engraftment rates. EBV PTLD remains a drawback of this approach.