Hurler's syndrome (HS), the most severe form of mucopolysaccharidosis type-I, causes progressive deterioration of the central nervous system and death in childhood. Allogeneic stem cell ...transplantation (SCT) before the age of 2 years halts disease progression. Graft failure limits the success of SCT. We analyzed data on HS patients transplanted in Europe to identify the risk factors for graft failure. We compared outcomes in 146 HS patients transplanted with various conditioning regimens and grafts. Patients were transplanted between 1994 and 2004 and registered to the European Blood and Marrow Transplantation database. Risk factor analysis was performed using logistic regression. 'Survival' and 'alive and engrafted'-rate after first SCT was 85 and 56%, respectively. In multivariable analysis, T-cell depletion (odds ratio (OR) 0.18; 95% confidence interval (CI) 0.04-0.71; P=0.02) and reduced-intensity conditioning (OR 0.08; 95% CI 0.02-0.39; P=0.002) were the risk factors for graft failure. Busulfan targeting protected against graft failure (OR 5.76; 95% CI 1.20-27.54; P=0.028). No difference was noted between cell sources used (bone marrow, peripheral blood stem cells or cord blood (CB)); however, significantly more patients who received CB transplants had full-donor chimerism (OR 9.31; 95% CI 1.06-82.03; P=0.044). These outcomes may impact the safety/efficacy of SCT for 'inborn-errors of metabolism' at large. CB increased the likelihood of sustained engraftment associated with normal enzyme levels and could therefore be considered as a preferential cell source in SCT for 'inborn errors of metabolism'.
Over the last 15 years, we have performed a total of 30 haematopoietic stem cell transplants on 27 children suffering from Hurler's syndrome. These children were of median age 11 months at the time ...of diagnosis and 25 months at the time of transplantation. The phenotype was severe in 21 cases (78%). The donor was familial in 13 cases: nine genotypically identical, one phenotypically identical father and three HLA-mismatched donors. Unrelated donors were selected in 17 cases: four phenotypically identical and 13 with 1-4 HLA mismatches. The conditioning regimen generally consisted of busulphan 600 mg/m(2) plus cyclophosphamide (Endoxan) 260 mg/kg and cyclosporin with methotrexate for GvHD prophylaxis. Rabbit anti-thymocyte globulin (Thymoglobuline) was given for all unrelated or familial mismatched transplantations. The median nucleated cell dose infused was 6.00 x 10(8) TNC/kg. No bone marrow (apart from one) was T cell depleted. For first transplants, engraftment was observed in 23/27 patients (pts) (85%). Primary graft failure was observed in 4/27 patients (16%), two were retransplanted from an unrelated donor, one with success. Four patients have died. The primary cause of death was infection in three cases (TRM : 11%) and disease progression in one case, after primary graft failure. Of the 23 living patients, two have disease progression after graft failure and 21 (78%) have functional grafts with a favourable long-term outcome after a median follow-up of 4.7 years, having either full or mixed chimaerism. Among surviving patients with functional grafts, 13 (62%) were transplanted from unrelated donors of whom 10 (77 %) had HLA disparities. There was a remarkably low incidence of GvHD. In our experience, haematopoietic stem cell transplantation using an HLA-matched familial donor or an HLA-matched or -mismatched unrelated donor without T cell depletion or irradiation can achieve a favourable outcome in Hurler's syndrome, with improved cognitive function, but with a limited effect on the corneas and skeleton.
We present here the long-term results of three randomized clinical trials conducted on children with newly diagnosed acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) between 1983 and 1998 by the Children Leukemia ...Cooperative Group (CLCG) from EORTC. In study 58831/32, the overall event-free survival (EFS) rates (+/- s.e.) at 6 and 10 years were 66% +/- 1.8% and 65% +/- 1.8%, respectively, and the risk of isolated central nervous system (CNS) relapse was 6% +/- 1% and 7% +/- 1%, respectively. In patients with a standard risk of relapse the omission of cyclophosphamide had no adverse effect on disease-free survival rates at 10 years (trial 58831). In medium- and high-risk patients the omission of radiotherapy did not increase the risk of CNS or systemic relapse (trial 58832). In study 58881 (1989-1998) the overall EFS rate at 8 years was 68.4% +/- 1.2% and the risk of isolated CNS relapse was 4.2%+/-0.5%. In this trial which adressed three randomized questions, the following results were obtained: the combination of cytarabine at high doses with methotrexate at high doses during interval therapy did not improve prognosis. The addition of 6-mercaptopurine iv during maintenance increased the risk of late relapse. E. coli asparaginase was more toxic and has a higher efficacy than Erwinia asparaginase. Leukocyte counts >100 x 10(9)/l, specific genetic abnormalities, a poor initial response to steroids or a high level of minimal residual disease at early time points were consistently associated with an adverse prognosis in the 58881 trial.
Emergence of acyclovir (Acy)-resistant herpes simplex virus (HSV) is a major concern in bone marrow transplant recipients. Phenotypic and genetic characterization of thymidine kinase (TK) was done ...for 7 Acy-susceptible and 11 Acy-resistant HSV-1 isolated from 11 patients. In total, 19 amino acid substitutions were detected that were not related to Acy resistance but to TK gene polymorphism, including 5 mutations that have not been previously reported. The Acy-resistant strain from 1 patient presented no TK gene mutation related to resistance. Five patients (45%) had isolates that harbored point mutations leading to amino acid substitutions that could be associated with Acy resistance. Of the 5 substitutions detected, 3 have not been previously reported (codons 51, 83, and 175). A nucleotide insertion or deletion was detected in resistant isolates from 5 patients (45%); these mutations are located in homopolymer repeats at codon 92 (1 subject) and at codon 146 (4 subjects).
Allogeneic stem cell transplantation is the only treatment that can restore a normal hematopoiesis in Fanconi anemia (FA). In this retrospective multicenter study, we analyzed the results of this ...approach using HLA-matched unrelated bone marrow donors, and tried to identify covariates predicting the outcome of the transplant. From January 1985 to June 1998, 69 FA patients were transplanted with unrelated HLA-matched donors. Patients' characteristics before and after transplant were provided by the European group blood and marrow transplant registry and were analyzed in collaboration with the European Fanconi Anemia Registry. The 3-year probability of survival was 33%. Extensive malformations, a positive recipient cytomegalovirus serology, the use of androgens before transplant, and female donors were associated with a worse outcome. Primary graft failures were observed more frequently when female donors were used, mainly because the grafts contained lower nucleated cell doses per kilogram of recipient body weight compared with grafts coming from male donors. The probability of grade III-IV acute graft-versus-host disease (GVHD) was 34%. Elevated serum alanine/aspartate transaminases before transplantation; limb, urogenital tract, or nephrologic malformations; and non-T-cell-depleted grafts were predictors of severe acute GVHD. This study shows the dramatic impact of preexisting congenital malformations on the outcome of FA patients transplanted with HLA-matched unrelated donors. If the use of T-cell depletion has led to a dramatic reduction of acute GVHD incidence, no significant outcome improvement was observed with this approach, mainly because of an increased risk of graft failure. (Blood. 2000;95:422-429)
Busulfan is an alkylating agent used in a conditioning regimen prior to bone marrow transplantation. Busulfan has a narrow therapeutic index, giving rise to major liver toxicity (veno-occlusive ...disease), and a wide interpatient and intrapatient pharmacokinetic variability. This report presents the results of a population pharmacokinetic analysis leading to models based on underlying diseases requiring bone marrow transplantation. One hundred children received oral busulfan-based conditioning regimens between March 1998 and February 2006. Busulfan pharmacokinetic parameter estimates (Ka, first order absorption rate constant; Vs, volume of distribution related to the body weight; and Cl/F, apparent clearance) were estimated by using the nonparametric adaptative grid (NPAG) algorithm in patients divided into four groups according to initial diagnosis: metabolic diseases, hemoglobinopathies, hematological malignancies, and immune deficiencies. Ka and Vs did no differ significantly in the four subgroups. Cl/F and areas under the plasma concentration curve were significantly different in the four groups. Cl/F was significantly higher in the hemoglobinopathies group (P = 0.002), with a mean value of 7.78 L . h, whereas the immune deficiencies group was characterized by the lowest Cl/F (3.59 L . h). Interindividual variability was shown by high interindividual parameter percent coefficients of variation (CV%) but, nevertheless, with less diversity in the population parameter distributions for Vs in the three subgroups-metabolic diseases, hemoglobinopathies, and malignant diseases-and in Cl/F for patients with hemoglobinopathies. The fit was good for busulfan concentration predictions based on Bayesian individual posterior values, with little bias and good precision. In comparison with the overall population, the only model of subgroup presenting a greater precision was patients with hemoglobinopathies (P = 0.002). Use of these more specific models of a given disease may well result in more accurate individualization of busulfan dose regimens, especially in very sparse blood sampling situations.
We report our experience in nine patients with Hurler syndrome (six with a severe and three with an intermediate phenotype) who successfully engrafted after bone marrow transplantation. The donor was ...a human leukocyte antigen-identical sibling in six cases, the human leukocyte antigen-identical father in one case, and an unrelated donor in two cases. One patient with Hurler syndrome and an intermediate phenotype received two successive grafts from the same donor. There was a beneficial effect of bone marrow transplantation on visceral features (hepatosplenomegaly, obstruction of the upper airway, and coarse facies); however, dysostosis multiplex worsened. All patients but one required surgery for carpal tunnel syndrome. Visual acuity was low because of corneal clouding, and two patients had glaucoma several years after the graft. Five patients had normal hearing before graft that remained normal, and four had hearing impairment that improved. All patients had learning difficulties, but none had severe mental retardation (IQ ranging from 75 to 103). The follow-up of patients with severe Hurler syndrome engrafted for more than 10 years emphasizes the limits and benefits of bone marrow transplantation. (J Pediatr 1998;133:119-25)
We retrospectively reviewed the results of serial pulmonary function tests (PFT) after allogeneic bone marrow transplantation (BMT) performed in 80 children at a single institution over a 16-year ...period. We looked for associations linking PFT results to graft-versus-host disease (GVHD), conditioning regimen (total body irradiation (TBI) vs busulphan), and cytomegalovirus immune status. The median follow-up after BMT was 4 years. At 2 years after BMT, significant declines were found in forced vital capacity (FVC) and forced expiratory volume in 1 s (FEV1), as compared to baseline. Both FEV1 and the FEV1/FVC ratio showed significantly greater reductions in the group conditioned with busulphan (n=22) than in the group conditioned with TBI (n=49) and were significantly lower in the patients with (n=16) than without (n=64) chronic GVHD. Busulphan may be associated with greater long-term lung toxicity than TBI. The relevance of this finding to selection of conditioning regimens for BMT should be examined in the light of the overall pattern of side effects. Chronic GVHD was associated with airway obstruction.
To assess the place of allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT) in the advanced stage of acute myeloid leukemia (AML), we retrospectively analyzed 379 consecutive patients who ...underwent allogeneic HSCT for advanced AML. The median follow-up of the entire cohort was 7.5 years. Sixty-nine patients (18%) were transplanted with primary resistant disease. Three hundred and ten (82%) were relapsed patients, 94 (30%) of whom were in untreated relapse, 67 (22%) in refractory relapse and 149 (48%) in 2nd or 3rd complete remission at time of transplantation. The 5-year probabilities of overall survival (OS), disease-free survival (DFS), and transplant-related mortality (TRM) were 22 +/- 4%, 20 +/- 4%, 45 +/- 6%, respectively. In multivariate analysis, we demonstrated the favorable impact on OS, DFS and TRM of two factors over which we have no control (age <15 years, complete remission achievement) and three factors over which we have some control (female donor, acute and chronic graft-versus-host disease). The results of this study suggest that the graft-versus-leukemia effect is important in advanced AML and that new HSCT modalities are needed for some patients with this indication.
Patients with lysosomal storage disorders have visceral, skeletal, and neurological abnormalities and a limited life expectancy. Bone marrow transplantation has been used to correct the metabolic ...defects and leads to metabolic improvements in most patients However, the long-term effect of such therapy is uncertain. We analysed the data from 63 patients transplanted for lysosomal storage diseases. The transplant-related mortality was 10% if an HLA-identical sibling marrow donor was available (n=40) and 20-25% if mismatched tissue was used. Data on the effect of bone marrow transplantation on biochemical and clinical disease variables were available in 29 of the 63. 28 had a follow-up duration of 1·0-10·2 years; 1 patient died of disease progression in the first year after stable engraftment. 13 patients who had severe neurological symptoms at the time of transplantation showed disease progression. Engraftment of bone marrow in 5 patients with non-neuronopathic Gaucher's disease led to complete disappearance of symptoms. 11 patients had skeletal symptoms because of various mucopolysaccharidoses (MPSs). There was stabilisation of the skeletal lesions during the observation period of 1·4-6·4 years, but none of the patients showed significant regression of the skeletal symptoms. The visceral features (hepatosplenomegaly, cardiac hypertrophy, and upper airway obstruction) in these patients abated after transplantation. We could not evaluate the biochemical and clinical variables in 34 patients because of graft rejection, transplant-related mortality, or follow-up of less than 1 year. There were significant beneficial effects of bone marrow transplantation in patients with non-neuronopathic Gaucher's disease. Stabilisation of disease was observed in patients with MPS-I and MPS-II; this potential benefit needs to be confirmed by longer follow-up. Bone marow transplantation was not effective if severe neurological symptoms were already present at the time of transplantation.