Login / Signup

A multicenter prospective, randomized, placebo-controlled phase II/III trial for preemptive acute graft-versus-host disease therapy.

Eva M WeissingerJochen MetzgerMichael SchleuningChristoph SchmidDiethelm MessingerGernot BeutelEva-Maria Wagner-DrouetJohannes ScheteligHerrad BaurmannAndreas RankFriedrich StolzlKerstin Schäfer-EckartKarin WestphalWolfgang BethgeS von HarsdorfDonald W BunjesDaniela HeidenreichStefan KleinErnst HollerHans H KreipeDanny JonigkIrina TürüchanowJulia RaadArmin PapkallaHeiko von der LeyenLothar HambachIyas HamwiSteve EhrlichJurgen KrauterMichael StadlerArnold Ganser
Published in: Leukemia (2020)
Acute graft-versus-host disease (aGvHD) contributes to about 50% of transplant-related mortality (non-relapse mortality) after allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT). Here the predictive value of a urinary proteomic profile (aGvHD_MS17) was tested together with preemptive prednisolone therapy. Two-hundred and fifty-nine of 267 patients were eligible for analysis. Ninety-two patients were randomized upon aGvHD_MS17 classification factor above 0.1 to receive either prednisolone (2-2.5 mg/kg, N = 44) or placebo (N = 47; N = 1 randomization failure) for 5 days followed by tapering. The remaining 167 patients formed the observation group. The primary endpoint of the randomized trial was incidence of aGvHD grade II between randomization and day +100 post HSCT. Analysis of the short-term preemptive prednisolone therapy in the randomized patients showed no significant difference in incidence or severity of acute GvHD (HR: 1.69, 95% CI: 0.66-4.32, P = 0.27). Prednisolone as preemptive treatment did not lead to an increase in relapse (20.2% in the placebo and 14.0% in the prednisolone group (P = 0.46)). The frequency of adverse events was slightly higher in the placebo group (64.4% versus 50%, respectively). Taken together, the results of the Pre-GvHD trial demonstrated the feasibility and safety of preemptive prednisolone treatment in the randomized patients.
Keyphrases