Cord blood transplantation for adult mature lymphoid neoplasms in Europe and Japan.
Mizuki WatanabeJunya KandaFernanda VoltAnnalisa RuggeriRitsuro SuzukiHanadi RafiiFumihiko KimuraBarbara CappelliEisei KondoGraziana Maria ScigliuoloSatoshi TakahashiChantal KenzeyMonica M Rivera-FrancoShinichiro OkamotoVanderson RochaPatrice ChevallierJaime Sanz CaballerSabine FürstJan CornelissenNoel MilpiedNaoyuki UchidaYasuhiro SugioTakafumi KimuraTatsuo IchinoheTakahiro FukudaMohamad MohtyRégis Peffault de LatourYoshiko AtsutaEliane GluckmanPublished in: Blood advances (2024)
To clarify the different characteristics and prognostic factors of cord blood transplantation (CBT) in adult patients with lymphoid neoplasms in Europe and Japan, we conducted a collaborative study. Patients aged 18-75 years receiving their first CBT (Europe: single CBT, n = 192; double CBT, n = 304; Japan: single CBT, n = 1150) in 2000-2017 were analyzed. Fewer patients with Hodgkin lymphoma (Europe vs Japan, 26% vs 5%), and older patients (≥50 years) (39% vs 59%) with a higher refined disease risk index (rDRI) (high-very high: 49% vs 14%) were included in the Japanese registry. High-very high rDRI was associated with inferior overall survival (OS) (vs low rDRI, Europe: hazard ratio [HR], 1.87; P = .001; Japan: HR, 2.34; P < .001) with higher progression/relapse risks. Total body irradiation (TBI)-containing conditioning contributed to superior OS both in Europe (vs TBI-reduced-intensity conditioning [RIC], non-TBI-RIC: HR, 1.93; P < .001; non-TBI-Myeloablative conditioning [MAC]: HR, 1.90; P = .003) and Japan (non-TBI-RIC: HR, 1.71; P < .001; non-TBI-MAC: HR 1.50, P = .007). The impact of HLA mismatches (≥2) on OS differed (Europe: HR, 1.52; P = .007; Japan: HR, 1.18; P = .107). CBT for lymphoid neoplasms, especially in those with high rDRI showed poor outcomes despite all the different characteristics in both registries. TBI should be considered in conditioning regimens to improve these outcomes. The different impacts of HLA mismatches call attention to the fundamental differences among these populations.
Keyphrases
- traumatic brain injury
- cord blood
- prognostic factors
- severe traumatic brain injury
- mild traumatic brain injury
- hodgkin lymphoma
- end stage renal disease
- chronic kidney disease
- stem cells
- type diabetes
- risk assessment
- ejection fraction
- newly diagnosed
- bone marrow
- metabolic syndrome
- low dose
- cell therapy
- radiation therapy
- high intensity
- adipose tissue
- childhood cancer