Recent advances in allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation have led to increasing use of this modality in older patients who tend to have been more heavily pretreated and have more comorbidities. Thus, the evaluation of comorbidity is of increasing importance to more precisely assess the benefits and risks of the transplantation procedure. Researchers from Seattle developed the hematopoietic cell transplantation-specific comorbidity index (HCT-CI), which was associated with the risk of mortality in several retrospective studies. However, its clinical utility has not been extensively documented in prospective studies. The aim of the present study was to evaluate the utility of the HCT-CI prospectively in a multicenter setting. Overall survival (OS) and nonrelapse mortality (NRM) at 2 years were 59% and 20%, respectively (n = 243). We found that the HCT-CI in its original scale failed to predict OS and NRM in this set of patients. Thus, we applied a flexible HCT-CI risk scoring system (restratifying scores from 0 to 3 to indicate low risk, and scores of 4 or higher as high-risk). The flexible HCT-CI was found to predict 2-year NRM and OS better than the original HCT-CI (NRM: P = .01, OS: P = .003). In subgroup analysis, we evaluated the usefulness of the original HCT-CI for patients excluding those who received cord blood transplantation (n = 186). Both 2-year OS and 2-year NRM were not significantly different according to the original HCT-CI (P = .304, P = .996), but with the flexible HCT-CI, there were significant differences in 2-year OS and 2-year NRM (P = .005 and P = .005, respectively). Multivariate analysis identified age >50, performance status (PS) <90, donor type (HLA-mismatched/unrelated donor), and the flexible HCT-CI ≥4 as significant predictors for worse OS at 2 years. However, the flexible HCT-CI did not remain a significant predictor for NRM at 2 years in multivariate analysis, whereas age, PS, and donor type did. The HCT-CI did not consistently predict both NRM and OS, but it still can be a useful tool in combination with other factors, such as PS and age. Furthermore, the HCT-CI, although potentially useful for capturing pretransplantation comorbidity and risk assessment, may need further validation before its adoption for routine clinical use.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.bbmt.2014.06.005DOI Listing

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Recent advances in allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation have led to increasing use of this modality in older patients who tend to have been more heavily pretreated and have more comorbidities. Thus, the evaluation of comorbidity is of increasing importance to more precisely assess the benefits and risks of the transplantation procedure. Researchers from Seattle developed the hematopoietic cell transplantation-specific comorbidity index (HCT-CI), which was associated with the risk of mortality in several retrospective studies.

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Patient comorbidities are being increasingly analyzed as predictors for outcome after hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT), especially in allogeneic HSCT (Allo-HSCT). Researchers from Seattle have recently developed several pretransplant scoring systems (hematopoietic cell transplantation comorbidity index [HCT-CI] and the Pretransplantation Assessment of Mortality (PAM) model) from large sets of HSCT recipients with the aim of improving non-transplant models, mainly the Charlson Comorbidity Index (CCI). The validation of these comorbidity indexes in other institutions and in different disease and conditioning-related settings is of interest to determine whether these models are potentially applicable in clinical practice and in research settings.

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