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Daniel R Couriel, MD

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Title: Daniel R Couriel, MD


1
Overview of Hematopoietic Stem Cell
Transplantation (HSCT)
  • Daniel R Couriel, MD
  • Sarah Cannon Blood and Marrow Transplant Program

2
Hematopoiesis
T-lymphocytes
Stem Cells
B-lymphocytes
Granulocytes
Monocytes
Eosinophils
Basophils
Erythrocytes
Megakaryocytes
Platelets
3
Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation
D
D
D
D
D
D
D
D
HSCT
Allogeneic
Autologous
R
R
Preparative Regimen
R
R
R
R
R
R
R
RL
RL
R
Allogeneic hematopoietic is an effective, but
toxic treatment for hematologic malignancies,
associated with a high risk of morbidity and
mortality (10-gt50), restricting its use to young
patients without comorbidities
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Types of HCT Histocompatibility
Autologous HCT
Allogeneic HCT
  • HLA-identical sibling
  • HLA-matched unrelated donor (MUD)
  • HLA-mismatched donor

Patients own cells
  • Choice of Transplant Type
  • Disease susceptibility to chemotherapy
  • Ability to eradicate malignant clones

9
Autologous vs. Allogeneic
  • Autologous
  • High dose therapy with reinfusion of own
    cryopreserved cells
  • Safer, TRM lt5
  • Possible contamination with malignant cells
  • No Graft-vs-malignancy effect
  • Higher risk of relapse
  • Allogeneic
  • Immunosuppressive Rx with infusion of cells from
    another person
  • Risk of rejection, GVHD
  • Higher risk, TRM 10-40
  • Graft-vs-malignancy (GVM) occurs
  • Lower risk of relapse
  • Can perform in diseases in which blood and BM
    involved

10
Sensitivity/resistance to GVM
  • Indolent diseases (CML, CLL, LGL)
  • Intrinsic sensitivity /or time for development
    of GVM
  • Rapidly proliferating disease may outpace immune
    response
  • Effective antigen presentation, costimulation
    (capacity to generate an immune response)
  • CML dendritic cells, LGL
  • ALL ineffective costimulation
  • Chemotherapy resistance
  • Chemorresistance may also affect sensitivity to
    immune mediated cytotoxicity

11
Nonablative/Reduced Intensity Regimens
Nonablative Reduced Intensity Ablative
TBI/CyT
TMF
F-TBI 2Gy
BuCy
BuF
Immunosuppression
MF
FCR
TC
TBI 2Gy
FlagIda
Myelosuppression
12
General Eligibility Criteria
  • Autotransplant Physiologic age 70, minimal
    comorbidities
  • Allotransplant Physiologic age 65, although
    patients with comorbidities or elderly (to
    chronologic age of 75) can be considered for
    reduced intensity HSCT
  • Comorbidities To be evaluated in the context of
    risk/benefit ratio
  • Chemosensitivity Precondition in the majority of
    diagnoses, particularly in DLCL, ALL, BC of CML.

13
Transplant Patient Flow in a Nutshell
  • Pretransplant Evaluation and donor search and
    collection
  • Inpatient Admission for chemotherapy,
    preparative regimen, acute GVHD
  • Ambulatory treatment Center (allo)/Outpatient
    (auto) From D/C to Day 100 (or beyond if
    complications occur)
  • LTFU phase in the outpatient clinic (cGVHD and
    other long term, survivorship issues)

14
ANNUAL NUMBERS OF BLOOD AND MARROW TRANSPLANTS
WORLDWIDE1970-2002
Autologous
NUMBER OF TRANSPLANTS
Allogeneic
1970
1975
1980
1985
1990
1995
2000
YEAR
1
15
INDICATIONS FOR ALLOGENEIC BLOOD AND MARROW
TRANSPLANTS REGISTERED WITH THE IBMTR,
1997-2002- Worldwide -
14,000
12,000
10,00
8,000
TRANSPLANTS
6,000
4,000
2,000
0
AML
OtherNon-MalignantDisease
CML
ALL
MDS/MPSOtherLeukemia
NHL
MultipleMyeloma
CLL
HodgkinDisease
RenalCell
OtherCancer
SAA
17
16
PROBABILITY OF SURVIVAL AFTER HLA-IDENTICAL
SIBLING MYELOABLATIVE TRANSPLANTS FOR LEUKEMIA-
Registered with the IBMTR, 1975-2002 -
³1995 (N15,126)
1985-1994 (N14,755)
PROBABILITY,
1975-1984 (N2,334)
P 0.0001
YEARS
Mln04_3.ppt
17
Complications after HSCT (non-immunologic)
  • Short and long term toxicities of preparative
    regimen
  • Secondary malignancies

18
Immune Reactivity with BMT
  • Graft-rejection
  • Recipient (host) immune cells react against donor
    cells
  • T-cells, NK cells
  • Graft-vs-host disease
  • Donor cells react against host tissues
  • T-cells
  • Immune deficiency
  • Profound deficiency of T-cells and B cells (CD4
    slower recovery than CD8),
  • Most severe in first 100 days
  • Slow recovery during first year
  • Graft-vs-malignancy effects
  • T-cells or NK cells react against residual
    malignancy

19
Human Leukocyte Antigens
  • Histocompatibility antigens are cell surface
    determinants that mediate immune reactions and
    graft rejection after transplantation between
    genetically diverse individuals.
  • T cells will recognize antigens presented as
    peptide fragments associated to HLA molecules.

20
HLA complex on chromosome 6
21
HLA Matching
  • A, B, C, DRB1, DQB1 - 10 out of 10 match
  • Molecular typing (allele level) - eg for class II
    (DRB1, DQB1)

22
Engraftment
Graft
Host
Stem cell dose T-cell dose (CD8) Graft-facilitatin
g cells Stromal stem cells?
Immunosuppression Preparative Regimen Post
transplant Rx Disease effects
Sensitization
Histocompatibility
With reduced immunosuppression in current NST
regimens, graft cells (stem, T-, NK- and
accessory cells) important to overcome rejection
23
Acute GVHD
  • Due to reactivity of mature T-cells in the
    graft vs. recipient (host) tissues, augmented by
    inflammatory cytokines
  • Targets- Skin, liver, GI tract
  • Immune system and marrow also a target
  • Usually occurs within the first 100 days

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Chronic GVHD
  • Most frequent late complication of allogeneic BMT
  • Occurs in 1/3 to 1/2 of patients
  • Most frequent in patients with acute GVHD, but
    1/3 of cases develop de novo
  • More frequent with older age
  • More frequent with PBSC transplants
  • Treatment- steroids /- other agents
  • Trade off immunosuppression improves
    manifestations of GVHD, but increases risk of
    infection

29
Lichenoid GVHD
30
Sclerosis
31
Sclerosis/Ulcer
32
Lichenoid changes, Lichen sclerosus, Sclerosis/Mor
phea, Poikiloderma, Dyspigmentation
33
Fasciitis Deep sclerosis
34
Lichenoid GVHD of the lips
35
Lichenoid GVHD with hyperkeratotic changes and
ulcerations
36
Late Complications of BMT
  • Secondary Malignancies
  • Cirrhosis (multifactorial, transfusions, toxicity
    of prior chemo, alcohol, GVHD)
  • Late infections (CMV, fungi if on steroids or
    cGVHD, encapsulated bacteria,)
  • EBV lymphoproliferative disease
  • Most patients return to normal or near normal
    performance status

37
Conclusions
  • HCT is an effective therapy for several types of
    hematologic malignancies
  • Autologous transplants are associated with a
    transplant-related mortality (TRM) similar to
    that of chemotherapy, but has the disadvantage of
    no GVM and therefore the potential for a higher
    relapse rate
  • Allogeneic transplants have a comparatively
    higher TRM, and GVHD is a major complication. The
    risk and commitment is substantially higher, but
    it is the price we have to pay for GVM and a
    long-term remission in select situations
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