Affiliation:
1. Washington University School of Medicine
2. Washington University in St. Louis School of Medicine
3. Washington University
4. Washington University in St. Louis
Abstract
Abstract
In patients requiring haploidentical hematopoietic cell transplant (haplo-HCT), the presence of donor specific anti-HLA antibodies (DSAs) is associated with high rates of primary graft failure and poor overall survival (OS). There is limited data regarding the effect of desensitization.
Adult patients undergoing haplo-HCT at Washington University School of Medicine from 2009- 2021 were identified. Patients were divided into three cohorts: no DSA, untreated DSA or treated DSA. DSA testing was performed. Desensitization therapy using plasmapheresis and IVIg (immunoglobulin) was performed.
We retrospectively identified 304 patients for study inclusion. 14 of 30 patients with DSAs underwent desensitization. By day +2, 57% of patients cleared all DSAs. OS was expectedly worse in patients with untreated DSAs. There were similar results between treated DSA and patients without DSA (OS median: control: 352 days vs. treated: 1331 days vs. untreated: 137 days, p = 0.02). RFS was also significantly different between the groups however with similar RFS in treated DSA and control groups (RFS median: control: 248 vs. treated: 322 v. untreated: 119, p = 0.03).
Desensitization before haplo-HCT produces similar outcomes to patients without DSAs. While the optimal desensitization protocol has not been established, all patients received a backbone of plasmapheresis and immunoglobulin.
Publisher
Research Square Platform LLC
Cited by
1 articles.
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