Safety and outcome after fludarabine-thiotepa-TBI conditioning for allogeneic transplantation: a prospective study of 30 patients with hematologic malignancies. Academic Article uri icon

Overview

abstract

  • Fludarabine, thiotepa and total body irradiation (TBI) has been used as conditioning in haplo-identical transplantation. We studied this conditioning regimen in adults undergoing matched sibling transplantation and alternative donor transplantation. A total of 30 consecutive patients underwent matched related, haplo-identical related or matched unrelated donor transplantation with fludarabine, thiotepa and TBI conditioning. All but four had advanced hematologic malignancies. For haplo-identical transplant, ATG was added to the regimen. All patients received peripheral blood stem cells; these were T-cell depleted for 2-antigen or 3-antigen mismatched related transplantation. Additional graft-versus-host disease prophylaxis consisted of tacrolimus and mini-methotrexate. One recipient of haplo-identical transplant failed to engraft; all other evaluable patients had prompt engraftment. Four patients died of regimen-related toxicity. In all, 14 additional patients died of regimen-related causes including four from failure to thrive with persistent thrombocytopenia and four from delayed pulmonary toxicity. Six patients relapsed. Progression-free survival at 12 months was 47% (90% CI: 25-69%) for recipients of HLA-identical sibling transplants and 30% (90% CI: 14-46%) for all patients. Five of six long-term survivors have extensive chronic GVHD. As a result of the delayed complications and a relatively high recurrence rate, we abandoned this regimen.

authors

  • Van Besien, Koen
  • Devine, S
  • Wickrema, A
  • Jessop, E
  • Amin, K
  • Yassine, M
  • Maynard, V
  • Stock, W
  • Peace, D
  • Ravandi, F
  • Chen, Y-H
  • Cheung, T
  • Vijayakumar, S
  • Hoffman, R
  • Sosman, J

publication date

  • July 1, 2003

Research

keywords

  • Antineoplastic Agents, Alkylating
  • Hematologic Neoplasms
  • Peripheral Blood Stem Cell Transplantation
  • Transplantation Conditioning
  • Vidarabine
  • Whole-Body Irradiation

Identity

Scopus Document Identifier

  • 10744232709

PubMed ID

  • 12815472

Additional Document Info

volume

  • 32

issue

  • 1