Influence of donor type, stem cell source and conditioning on outcomes after haploidentical transplant for lymphoma – a LWP-EBMT study

Abstract

Haploidentical stem cell transplantation (haploSCT) is becoming a major transplant modality for lymphoma. To assess the effects of donor characteristics, stem cell source and conditioning on outcomes, we identified 474 adults with Hodgkin (HL; 240), peripheral T-cell (PTCL; 88), diffuse large B-cell (77), mantle cell (40) or follicular lymphoma (FL; 29), who received haploSCT with post-transplant cyclophosphamide. Median follow-up of alive patients was 32 months. On multivariate analysis, acute graft-versus-host disease (GVHD) grade 2–4 was lower with offspring donors or bone marrow cells, whereas extensive chronic GVHD was higher in partial response at haploSCT or when using sisters, haploidentical donors beyond first degree, or female donors in male patients. Progression-free survival (PFS) was better for FL, HL and PTCL, whereas overall survival (OS) was better for HL and PTCL. Complete remission at haploSCT improved PFS and OS whereas these were negatively affected by cytomegalovirus donor positive/recipient positive status. No other donor characteristics (age, gender, human leucocyte antigen mismatch, ABO incompatibility) affected PFS or OS except use of haploidentical donors beyond first degree, which negatively affected OS. PFS and OS are mostly influenced by disease status and lymphoma subtype, supporting the use of any first degree haploidentical family member as a donor. © 2019 British Society for Haematology and John Wiley & Sons Ltd

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Keywords

Conditioning, Donor type, Haploidentical transplant, Lymphoma, Stem cell source, Acute disease, Adolescent, Adult, Age factors, Aged, Cyclophosphamide, Disease-free survival, Female, Follow-up studies, Graft vs host disease, Hematopoietic stem cell transplantation, Humans, Male, Middle aged, Retrospective studies, Sex factors, Survival rate, Transplantation conditioning, Transplantation, haploidentical, Acute graft versus host disease, Article, Bone marrow cell, Chronic graft versus host disease, Diffuse large b cell lymphoma, Follicular lymphoma, Follow up, Haploidentical donor, Haploidentical stem cell transplantation, Haploidentical transplantation, Hodgkin disease, Human, Human cell, Major clinical study, Mantle cell lymphoma, Mortality, Multicenter study, Multivariate analysis, Non relapse mortality, Overall survival, Peripheral t cell lymphoma, Priority journal, Progression free survival, Relapse, Remission, Retrospective study, Stem cell, Stem cell transplantation, Treatment outcome, Treatment response, Age, Clinical trial, Disease free survival, Graft versus host reaction, Sex factor

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