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Intensive Care Risk and Long-Term Outcomes in Pediatric Allogeneic Hematopoietic Cell Transplant Recipients.

Matthew S ZinterRuta BrazauskasJoelle StromStella ChenStephanie Bo-SubaitAkshay SharmaAmer BeitinjanehDimana DimitrovaGregory GuilcherJaime M PreusslerKasiani C MyersNeel S BhattOlle RingdénPeiman HemattiRobert J HayashiSagar S PatelSatiro Nakamura De OliveiraSeth J RotzSherif M BadawyTaiga NishihoriDavid K BuchbinderBetty K HamiltonBipin P SavaniHélène M SchoemansMohamed Lotfy SorrorLena E WinestoneChristine DuncanRachel PhelanChristopher C Dvorak
Published in: Blood advances (2023)
Allogeneic hematopoietic cell transplantation (HCT) can be complicated by life-threatening organ toxicity and infection necessitating intensive care. Epidemiologic data have been limited by single-center studies, poor database granularity, and a lack of long-term survivors. To identify contemporary trends in ICU utilization and long-term outcomes, we merged data from the Center for International Blood and Marrow Transplant Research and the Virtual Pediatric Systems databases. We identified 6,995 pediatric HCT patients age ≤21 years who underwent 1st allogeneic HCT between 2008-2014 across 69 centers in the United States or Canada and followed patients until the year 2020. ICU admission was required for 1067 patients (8.3% by day +100, 12.8% by 1 year, and 15.3% by 5 years post-HCT), and was linked to demographic background, pre-transplant organ toxicity, allograft type and HLA-match, and the development of graft-versus-host disease or malignancy relapse. Survival to ICU discharge was 85.7% but more than half of ICU survivors required ICU readmission, leading to 52.5% and 42.6% survival at 1- and 5-years post-ICU transfer, respectively. ICU survival was worse among patients with malignant disease, poor pre-transplant organ function, and alloreactivity risk-factors. Among 1-year HCT survivors, those who required ICU in the first year had 10% lower survival at 5 years and developed new dialysis-dependent renal failure at a greater rate (p<0.001). Thus, while ICU management is common and survival to ICU discharge is high, ongoing complications necessitate recurrent ICU admission and lead to a poor 1-year outcome in select high-risk patients.
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