AI Article Synopsis

  • Stem cell transplantation is essential for treating severe aplastic anemia patients, with a study involving 111 patients revealing that many had high-risk factors.
  • Most patients (65.7%) were identified as high-risk, with matched related donor (MRD) transplants showing better survival rates compared to haplo-identical donor (HID) transplants.
  • The overall survival rate was 67%, emphasizing the need for MRDs as the preferred option, but acknowledging HIDs as a viable alternative for life-threatening cases.

Article Abstract

Introduction: Stem cell transplantation is the cornerstone of therapy for transplant-eligible patients with severe aplastic anemia.

Materials And Methods: Patients with severe aplastic anemia undergoing stem cell transplantation (including matched haplo-identical related donors) with a standard conditioning regimen and graft-versus-host disease (GVHD) prophylaxis were analyzed. High-risk patients were identified as having undergone >20 pre-transplant transfusions, having febrile neutropenia at the time of transplantation, or having undergone failed immunosuppressive therapy.

Results: A total of 111 patients underwent stem cell transplantation, with a median age of 17 years. Seventy-six patients received matched related donor (MRD) transplants, and 35 received haplo-identical donor (HID) transplants. Among all patients, 65.7% were high-risk patients, with a significantly higher proportion among those receiving HID transplants (38% for MRD vs. 83% for HID). Acute GVHD grades 2-4 was observed in 9% of patients, and chronic GVHD in 16.2% of patients. Primary graft rejection was more common in 9.9% of patients (21% for HID, 5% for MRD). The 2-year overall survival and disease-free survival were 67% and 66%, respectively, with better outcomes for MRD and low-risk HID transplants than for high-risk HID transplants. The most common cause of mortality was sepsis-related death (accounting for 27% of the total deaths). Sepsis-related early deaths were significantly more common among high-risk patients who received HID transplants.

Conclusion: We conclude that MRDs remain the preferred donor source for allogeneic stem cell transplants in patients with aplastic anemia; however, HIDs can be considered as a life-saving treatment for patients with aplastic anemia.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10260317PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.31547/bct-2019-018DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

stem cell
20
cell transplantation
16
aplastic anemia
16
patients
13
severe aplastic
12
high-risk patients
12
patients severe
8
patients received
8
transplants patients
8
patients aplastic
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!