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Long-term follow-up of haploidentical transplantation in relapsed/refractory severe aplastic anemia: a multicenter prospective study

Lan‐Ping Xu, Zhengli Xu, Shunqing Wang, Depei Wu, Sujun Gao, Jianmin Yang, Linghui Xia, Qifa Liu, Ming Jiang, Hai Bai, Xi Zhang, Xin Wang, Xiao‐Jun Huang

2022Science Bulletin60 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

In recent decades, haploidentical stem cell transplantation (haplo-SCT) to treat severe aplastic anemia (SAA) has achieved remarkable progress. However, long-term results are still lacking. We conducted a multicenter prospective study involving SAA patients who underwent haplo-SCT as salvage therapy. Long-term outcomes were assessed, mainly focusing on survival and quality of life (QoL). Longitudinal QoL was prospectively evaluated during pretransplantation and at 3 and 5 years posttransplantation using the SF-36 scale in adults and the PedsQL 4.0 scale in children. A total of 287 SAA patients were enrolled, and the median follow-up was 4.56 years (range, 3.01-9.05 years) among surviving patients. During the long-term follow-up, 268 of 275 evaluable patients (97.5%) obtained sustained full donor chimerism, and 93.4% had complete hematopoietic recovery. The estimated overall survival and failure-free survival for the whole cohort at 9 years were 85.4% ± 2.1% and 84.0% ± 2.2%, respectively. Age (≥18 years) and a poorer performance status (ECOG >1) were identified as risk factors for survival outcomes. For QoL recovery after haplo-SCT, we found that QoL progressively improved from pretransplantation to the 3-year and 5-year time points with statistical significance. The occurrence of chronic graft versus host disease was a risk factor predicting poorer QoL scores in both the child and adult cohorts. At the last follow-up, 74.0% of children and 72.9% of adults returned to normal school or work. These inspiring long-term outcomes suggest that salvage transplantation with haploidentical donors can be routine practice for SAA patients without human leukocyte antigen (HLA)-matched donors.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineQuality of life (healthcare)TransplantationAplastic anemiaHematopoietic stem cell transplantationInternal medicineProspective cohort studyCohortRefractory (planetary science)Cohort studyPediatricsSurgeryBone marrowAstrobiologyPhysicsNursingHematopoietic Stem Cell TransplantationPolyomavirus and related diseasesReproductive Biology and Fertility
Long-term follow-up of haploidentical transplantation in relapsed/refractory severe aplastic anemia: a multicenter prospective study | Litcius