Successful management with urgent haploidentical‐peripheral blood stem cell transplantation for a patient with severe aplastic anaemia who developed disseminated fungal infection following immunosuppressive therapy

Author:

Ikenobe Norihito1ORCID,Fujimori Kentaro1ORCID,Gocho Yoshihiro1ORCID,Myojin Shota2ORCID,Yamada Masaki23ORCID,Imadome Kenichi3ORCID,Miyasaka Mikiko4,Miyazaki Osamu4,Yoneda Akihiro5ORCID,Matsumoto Shotaro6,Nakagawa Satoshi6,Deguchi Takao1ORCID,Iguchi Akihiro1ORCID,Tomizawa Daisuke1ORCID,Ogimi Chikara2ORCID,Matsumoto Kimikazu1ORCID,Sakaguchi Hirotoshi1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Children's Cancer Center National Center for Child Health and Development Tokyo Japan

2. Department of Medical Subspecialties Division of Infectious Diseases National Center for Child Health and Development Tokyo Japan

3. Department of Advanced Medicine for Viral Infections National Center for Child Health and Development Tokyo Japan

4. Department of Radiology National Center for Child Health and Development Tokyo Japan

5. Department of Surgical Specialties Division of Surgery National Center for Child Health and Development Tokyo Japan

6. Critical Care Medicine National Center for Child Health and Development Tokyo Japan

Abstract

AbstractUrgent haploidentical haematopoietic cell transplantation may be considered in cases of severe aplastic anaemia (SAA) without a human leukocyte antigen‐matched donor and suffering from severe infection. However, deciding on allogeneic transplantation in the setting of active systemic infection is challenging due to poor outcomes. This report presents a case of disseminated Magnusiomyces capitatus infection in a 5‐year‐old male who underwent immunosuppressive therapy for hepatitis‐associated SAA. To address the critical situation, granulocyte transfusion was promptly administered from the patient's mother, followed by unmanipulated haploidentical peripheral blood stem cell transplantation from the patient's father with posttransplant cyclophosphamide, ultimately resulting in successful rescue.

Funder

National Center for Child Health and Development

Publisher

Wiley

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