Patients with adenosine deaminase deficiency surviving after hematopoietic stem cell transplantation are at high risk of CNS complications

Author:

Hönig Manfred1,Albert Michael H.2,Schulz Ansgar1,Sparber-Sauer Monika1,Schütz Catharina1,Belohradsky Bernd2,Güngör Tayfun3,Rojewski Markus T.4,Bode Harald1,Pannicke Ulrich4,Lippold Dominique4,Schwarz Klaus4,Debatin Klaus-Michael1,Hershfield Michael S.5,Friedrich Wilhelm1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Pediatrics, University of Ulm, Germany;

2. Dr von Haunersches Kinderspital, Ludwig Maximilians University Munich, Germany;

3. Division of Immunology/Hematology/BMT, University Children's Hospital, Zürich, Switzerland;

4. Institute for Transfusion Medicine, University Hospital of Ulm and Institute for Clinical Transfusion Medicine and Immunogenetics, Ulm, Germany;

5. Duke Medical Center, Duke University, Durham, NC

Abstract

AbstractAdenosine deaminase (ADA) deficiency is a systemic metabolic disease that causes an autosomal recessive variant of severe combined immunodeficiency (SCID) and less consistently other complications including neurologic abnormalities. Hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT) is able to correct the immunodeficiency, whereas control of nonimmunologic complications has not been extensively explored. We applied HSCT in 15 ADA-deficient patients consecutively treated at our institutions since 1982 and analyzed long-term outcome. Seven patients received transplants without conditioning from HLA-matched family donors (MFDs); the other 8 patients received conditioning and were given transplants either from HLA-mismatched family donors (MMFDs; n = 6) or from matched unrelated donors (MUDs; n = 2). At a mean follow-up period of 12 years (range, 4-22 years), 12 patients are alive with stable and complete immune reconstitution (7 of 7 after MFD, 4 of 6 after MMFD, and 1 of 2 after MUD transplantation). Six of 12 surviving patients show marked neurologic abnormalities, which include mental retardation, motor dysfunction, and sensorineural hearing deficit. We were unable to identify disease or transplantation-related factors correlating with this divergent neurologic outcome. The high rate of neurologic abnormalities observed in long-term surviving patients with ADA deficiency indicates that HSCT commonly fails to control CNS complications in this metabolic disease.

Publisher

American Society of Hematology

Subject

Cell Biology,Hematology,Immunology,Biochemistry

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