Litcius/Paper detail

Results of a completely outpatient autologous stem cell transplant program for lymphoma patients receiving reduced-intensity conditioning

José Carlos Jaime‐Pérez, Marcela Hernández‐Coronado, Ernesto Picón‐Galindo, Lorena Salazar‐Cavazos, Cesar Homero Gutiérrez‐Aguirre, David Gómez‐Almaguer

2021Leukemia & lymphoma/Leukemia and lymphoma12 citationsDOI

Abstract

Autologous stem cell transplantation (ASCT) is commonly an in-patient procedure. However, outpatient ASCT grows as a cost-effective and feasible option for patients with lymphoma and reports assessing it after reduced-intensity conditioning (RIC) are sparse. We report the outcome of 102 patients with lymphoma who underwent ASCT on a full outpatient basis in a single-center transplant program between 2010 and 2020. Forty-two percent of the cohort required transfusion support, 36.3% experienced a neutropenic fever episode, 25.5% mucositis, and 9.8% developed severe infection. At a median time of 5 days (range 1-28), only 22.5% of the cohort required admission within the first 100 days after the autograft, median length of hospital stay was 0 days (range 0-14) and neutropenic fever was the most common reason for hospitalization. Non-relapse mortality at 1 year was 5%. ASCT in a completely outpatient setting is feasible, safe, and highly effective to treat lymphoma patients.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineAutologous stem-cell transplantationMucositisCohortLymphomaSingle CenterSurgeryInternal medicineTransplantationChemotherapyHematopoietic Stem Cell TransplantationNeutropenia and Cancer InfectionsLymphoma Diagnosis and Treatment