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Long-term outcome in patients with Fanconi anemia who received hematopoietic stem cell transplantation: a retrospective nationwide analysis.

Miharu YabeTomohiro MorioKen TabuchiDaisuke TomizawaDaiichiro HasegawaHiroyuki IshidaNao YoshidaTakashi KoikeYoshiyuki TakahashiKatsuyoshi KohYasuhiro OkamotoHideki SanoKeisuke KatoYoshinobu KandaHiroaki GotoJunko TakitaTakako MiyamuraMaiko NoguchiKoji KatoYoshiko HashiiYoshiko AstutaHiromasa Yabe
Published in: International journal of hematology (2020)
We retrospectively analyzed nationwide records of 163 Fanconi anemia (FA) patients [aplastic anemia (AA), n = 118; myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS), n = 30; acute leukemia, n = 15] who underwent first allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT) between 1987 and 2015 in Japan. An alternative donor was used in 119 (73%) patients, and 160 (98%) patients received a non-T-cell-depleted graft. With an 8.7-year median follow-up, 5-year overall survival (OS) was 81%. The 5-year OS was significantly higher in AA patients than in MDS and acute leukemia patients (89%, 71%, and 44%, respectively). In the MDS/leukemia group, factors associated with poor outcome in univariate analysis were older age at HSCT (≥ 18 years), conditioning regimen without anti-thymocyte or lymphocyte globulin, and grade II-IV acute graft-versus-host disease. After 1 year, of 137 survivors, 15 developed subsequent malignancies, of whom 12 were diagnosed with head and neck (HN)/esophageal cancer. An irradiation regimen and older age were associated with the risk of HN/esophageal cancer. Five of seven deaths were attributed to subsequent malignancies more than 5 years after HSCT. On the basis of the risk factors for HSCT in MDS/leukemia patients and subsequent malignancies, a more effective HSCT approach is required.
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