Aplastic Anemia |
1 Department of Transfusion Medicine, Warren G. Magnuson Clinical Center, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD
2 Hematology Branch, National Heart, Lung, & Blood Institute, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD
3 Immunocompromised Host Section, Pediatric Oncology Branch, National Cancer Institute, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD
4 Office of Biostatistics Research, National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD, USA
Correspondence: Karen Quillen, Department of Laboratory, Medicine, Boston University, Medical Center, 88 East Newton, St., Boston, MA 02118, USA., E-mail: kq{at}bu.edu
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Design and Methods: A retrospective analysis was performed on all patients with severe aplastic anemia who had received granulocyte transfusions between 1997 and 2007 in our institute. Survival to hospital discharge was the primary outcome. Secondary outcomes included microbiological, radiographic and clinical responses of the infection at 7 and 30 days after initiating granulocyte therapy, and post-transfusion absolute neutrophil count, stratified by HLA alloimmunization status.
Results: Thirty-two patients with severe aplastic anemia underwent granulocyte transfusions; the majority had received horse antithymocyte globulin and cyclosporine A. One quarter of patients had demonstrable HLA alloimmunization prior to the initiation of granulocyte therapy. Infections were evenly divided between invasive bacterial and fungal infections unresponsive to maximal antibiotic and/or antifungal therapy. The median number of granulocyte components transfused was nine (range, 2–43). The overall survival to hospital discharge was 58%. Survival was strongly correlated with hematopoietic recovery. Among the 18 patients who had invasive fungal infections, 44% survived to hospital discharge. Response at 7 and 30 days correlated with survival. The mean post-transfusion absolute neutrophil count did not differ significantly between response groups (i.e. patients grouped according to whether they had complete or partial resolution of infection, stable disease or progressive infection). There was also no difference in mean post-transfusion absolute neutrophil count between the patients divided according to HLA alloimmunization status.
Conclusions: Granulocyte transfusions may have an adjunctive role in severe infections in patients with severe aplastic anemia. HLA alloimmunization is not an absolute contraindication to granulocyte therapy.
Key words: granulocyte, transfusions, severe aplastic anemia.
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Patients were eligible to receive a granulocyte transfusion if they had the following: (i) proven or probable invasive fungal disease according to the European Organization for Research and Treatment of Cancer criteria,13 or (ii) a bacterial infection which, in the experience of our center, was associated with greater than 90% mortality, and (iii) an ANC of less than 0.2x109/L, and (iv) no response to appropriate antibiotic or antifungal therapy for 24–48 h.
Screening for alloimmunization to human leukocyte antigens
All patients were screened for the presence of antibodies to human leukocyte antigens (HLA) prior to beginning granulocyte therapy. The methods used for detecting these antibodies included a microlymphocytotoxicity assay, a flow cytometric panel reactive assay (flow-PRA®; OneLambda, Canoga Park, CA, USA), and an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA Lambda Antigen Tray; OneLambda, Canoga Park, CA, USA). An attempt was made to find (partially) HLA-matched granulocyte donors for patients who were alloimmunized. Subsequent testing for HLA antibody was performed only if there was a suspicion of de novo alloimmunization.
Donor selection and granulocytapheresis
After giving appropriate informed consent, volunteer apheresis donors received a single subcutaneous injection of filgrastim (Amgen, Thousand Oaks, CA, USA) 12–18 h prior to leukapheresis, and 8 mg of dexamethasone orally 12 h prior to leukapheresis. The dose of G-CSF was 5 µg/kg until July 2005, and 480 µg as a standard dose thereafter. Early in our series of granulocytapheresis, a few donors chose to receive either dexamethasone or G-CSF only; however, more than 95% of our granulocyte donors received both G-CSF and dexamethasone. Cytomegalovirus serostatus was not a selection criterion. ABO compatibility was preferred but not required. Less than 5% of donors were family members, generally HLA-matched siblings who had already donated peripheral blood CD34+ cells for HSCT. Granulocyte concentrates were collected with a blood cell separator (CS3000 Plus, Fenwal, Deerfield, IL, USA) processing seven liters of whole blood with trisodium citrate anticoagulant (Citra Anticoagulants, Braintree, MA, USA) and 6% hetastarch (Hespan, Braun Medical, Irvine, CA, USA).
Granulocyte concentrate processing and transfusion
Granulocyte concentrates were sedimented by gravity following collection if they were not ABO-compatible with the recipient. All granulocyte concentrates were irradiated, and transfused within 8–10 h of collection. Patients received pre-medication with antipyretics. Amphotericin therapy was avoided for 4–6 h before and 4–6 h after granulocyte transfusion. Once a course of granulocyte therapy had been initiated, the goal was to provide granulocyte concentrates daily or on alternate days.
Outcome measures
Survival to hospital discharge was the primary outcome of this study. Secondary outcomes included responses at 7 and 30 days after the initiation of granulocyte therapy, and post-transfusion ANC, stratified by HLA alloimmunization status. Accurate post-transfusion white blood cell (WBC) increments were reliably obtained for the first 10 patients; this information was calculated from a complete blood count immediately prior to the granulocyte transfusion, and a repeat count 1–4 h after the transfusion. Complete blood counts were performed in all patients 5–8 h post-transfusion, given that the granulocyte transfusions occurred in the late evening, and were followed by morning complete blood counts.
Response was categorized 7 and 30 days after starting the granulocyte transfusions by taking into account microbiological data (resolution of bacteremia), radiographic criteria (decrease in infiltrates or nodule size), and clinical criteria. The clinical criteria included defervescence or a temperature decrease of 1.5–2°C, hemodynamic stabilization, and improvement in symptoms such as dyspnea. A complete response was defined as improvement in all three criteria (microbiological, radiographic and clinical); a partial response was defined as improvement in one or two criteria; stable disease was defined as no improvement; progressive disease signified clinical deterioration or a breakthrough infection. ANC data over the course of granulocyte therapy were plotted using an "area under the curve" (AUC) approximation (by the linear trapezoidal method) in an effort to quantify the degree of "neutrophil protection" provided by granulocyte therapy. For instance, a patient who received granulocyte transfusions on two consecutive days would be expected to have a higher AUC than the same patient receiving granulocyte transfusions 3 days apart over a weekend.
Statistical analysis
Data were recorded and analyzed with a spreadsheet application (Microsoft Excel, Seattle, WA, USA), including the formula for ANC AUC analysis. Pearsons correlation coefficient was calculated for the correlation analysis. Univariate analysis was conducted for the following factors potentially influencing survival: age, period of treatment (1997–2002 versus 2003–2007), number of granulocyte transfusions, presence of HLA alloimmunization prior to initiation of granulocyte therapy, presence of invasive fungal infection, site of infection (central nervous system or lung involvement versus no central nervous system/lung involvement). Logistic regression was performed using S-Plus (Insightful, Palo Alto, CA, USA).
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Table 1. Characteristics of SAA patients who received granulocytes.
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The types of infections are shown in Table 2. Some infections were polymicrobial, involving more than one bacterial strain, more than one mold, or combined bacterial and fungal infections. Of the 18 patients who had any invasive fungal infection, half were infected by Aspergillus species, predominantly in the lung; the sinuses were also frequently involved. Bacterial infections included bacteremia in all cases, including two patients who had Clostridium septicum myositis.
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Table 2. Characteristics of infections in SAA patients receiving granulocyte therapy.
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Figure 1. (A) Relationship between ANC increment and granulocyte dose transfused for the first five non-alloimmunized patients who received 69 granulocyte concentrates. R2=0.26, p<0.01. (B) ANC over time for one patient who developed de novo HLA antibodies during the course of granulocyte therapy. Arrows denote granulocyte transfusions.
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Table 3A. Response at day 7 and day 30 versus survival to hospital discharge.
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Table 3B. Univariate logistic analysis for survival to discharge.
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Thirteen patients had positive tests for HLA antibody at some point during granulocyte therapy. An attempt was made to provide at least partially-HLA matched granulocytes for the nine patients known to be alloimmunized prior to the initiation of granulocyte transfusions; two of these patients received granulocytes from HLA-matched siblings. The mean post-transfusion ANC among the remaining seven alloimmunized patients was 1.52x109/L. Of the patients who were not alloimmunized at baseline, 4/23 (17%) developed HLA antibodies after the initiation of granulocyte therapy; one of these patients experienced pulmonary symptoms as a reaction to granulocyte transfusion, prompting repeat HLA antibody testing. In the 19 non-alloimmunized patients, the mean post-transfusion ANC was 1.456x109/L, which was not significantly different from the mean post-transfusion ANC in the alloimmunized group.
The effect of HLA alloimmunization or splenomegaly on the WBC increment for the first ten patients in our series, for whom accurate pre- and post-transfusion WBC counts were available, is shown in Figure 2. Among these ten patients, those who did not have splenomegaly or HLA alloimmunization had significantly higher WBC increments than those who had either. WBC increments were used in this analysis because the WBC differential (for ANC) was not typically repeated within a 8-hour period.
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Figure 2. Effect of splenomegaly and positive HLA antibody screen on absolute WBC increments 0–4 h post-transfusion. Ends of boxes represent 25% and 75% of data. End bars represent 5% and 95% of data. Dashed line inside box is the mean. Solid line inside the box is the median. Open circles represent outliers. Numbers on the x-axis refer to granulocyte transfusion episodes.
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Invasive fungal infections, particularly those caused by Aspergillus species, have long been recognized as a major cause of death in SAA. In a series from our institution, in which all infections in 103 patients with aplastic anemia seen between 1978 and 1989 were examined, all 14 patients with aspergillosis died despite amphotericin B therapy and selected adjuvant surgical resection; all ten patients with systemic Candida infections also eventually died.14 In a more recent series of 42 patients with aplastic anemia followed between 1994 and 2000,7 despite the use of fluconazole prophylaxis, invasive fungal infections (yeasts and molds) accounted for 36% of neutropenic infections, and five of these nine episodes were fatal. The role of prophylactic antifungal therapy in patients expected to have prolonged neutropenia is controversial.
Before the introduction of G-CSF, granulocyte collections from normal donors (typical dose of 4x109 cells if hetastarch or corticosteroids were not used) produced inadequate cell doses except for neonates.15 A meta-analysis exploring the efficacy of granulocyte transfusions in the pre-G-CSF era confirmed the importance of cell dose.16 When granulocyte donors are stimulated with G-CSF with or without corticosteroids, granulocyte doses of 4–7x1010 are achievable. The majority of donors experience transient bone pain and myalgias; long-term follow-up of our granulocyte donors has not shown any adverse outcomes.17 Recent studies of therapeutic granulocyte transfusions for neutropenic infections in patients with leukemia and/or undergoing HSCT have shown survival rates of 31–81%; in patients with invasive fungal infections, the survival rates range from 20–80%. These studies, summarized in Table 4,1–6,18–25 vary in the definition of invasive fungal infections, the timing of initiating granulocyte therapy, the cell dose of granulocytes transfused, and the number of granulocyte doses given. One study was randomized, but only 60% of patients were actually neutropenic prior to receiving granulocytes, and 44% of patients randomized to the granulocyte arm received only one or two transfusions before neutrophil recovery.23
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Table 4. Selected studies of therapeutic granulocyte transfusion (Tx) in hematology/stem cell transplant patients in the G-CSF era (*1-month survival). Control group did not receive granulocytes.
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Our response categorization correlated very well with survival to discharge, for all patients and for the subset of patients with fungal infections. This does not necessarily imply a cause-and-effect relationship between granulocyte transfusion and discharge, since "response" could have occurred with antimicrobials alone if given enough time. The strong correlation between survival to hospital discharge and hematopoietic recovery supports the role of granulocyte transfusion as a bridge to ANC recovery or HSCT. Absence of a dose response suggests a threshold phenomenon: we speculate that as long as the post-transfusion ANC exceeds a certain cutoff (such as 1x109/L), there is no correlation between post-transfusion ANC and clinical response. The interval between transfusions as a measure of dose intensity was similarly not significantly different among response groups; the mean interval was 1.7 days. This suggests that granulocyte therapy every other day may be as effective as daily granulocyte transfusions, which are logistically much more difficult to provide. Concurrent corticosteroid administration can potentially impair neutrophil function, but most of our patients had completed serum sickness prophylaxis by the time of initiating granulocyte therapy; in vitro, G-CSF can prevent corticosteroid-induced suppression of neutrophilic anti-hyphal function.26
Pre-existing alloimmunization did not preclude adequate post-transfusion ANC and did not cause severe pulmonary or other reactions, unlike the experience with granulocyte transfusion in chronic granulomatous disease.27 We had accurate pre-transfusion complete blood counts for only the first ten patients in the series: in this subset, the WBC increment was significantly lower for the patients with HLA antibodies than for those without. We achieved partial HLA matching within cross-reactive groups (CREG) or minimized triplet mismatches by HLA-Matchmaker28 for approximately half the granulocyte transfusions given to alloimmunized patients, perhaps accounting for the good post-transfusion ANC in this group of patients. In an earlier study2 using unrelated volunteer granulocyte donors, HLA alloimmunized patients did not have lower ANC increments or increased transfusion reactions. Another study demonstrated lower ANC increments in patients who were alloimmunized: in that study,29 each patient received four granulocyte concentrates from the same related donor (first-degree relative), prophylactically following HSCT with components that were all cross-match compatible by lymphocytotoxicity and leukoagglutination assays. There was no difference in ANC increments between alloimmunized and non-alloimmunized patients for the first two granulocyte transfusions; the difference became significant only with the third and fourth transfusions. The generalizability of these results is not clear.
De novo alloimmunization was associated with pulmonary toxicity in one of five of our patients; much more commonly, acute lung injury was attributable to fluid overload. Meticulous fluid management is crucial since these critically ill patients typically receive hydration because of the use of amphotericin (or derivatives) and antibiotics, fluid boluses for hypotension, multiple blood products and hyperalimentation. Our observed incidence of pulmonary toxicity was 16% (5/32), in keeping with the incidence reported in the literature (Table 4); of note, no pulmonary reaction has occurred in the latter 7 years of the study, reflecting the improved experience with fluid management in critically ill patients undergoing granulocyte therapy.
There are several limitations of this study. First, it is a retrospective, single institution, observational study. Our numbers were too small for us to generate a multivariate logistic regression model of factors that influence survival. Second, the study is limited to SAA patients; these results may not, therefore, be extendable to leukemia patients or HSCT recipients who routinely receive intensive cytotoxic chemotherapy. A large multicenter randomized controlled trial is underway to study the incremental benefits of granulocyte transfusion in infections post-HSCT. Finally, the availability of newer antibiotics and antifungal agents or cytokine regimens to treat neutropenic infections30 may deter the use of G-CSF and dexamethasone to stimulate normal donors, which can only be performed under the auspices of a clinical research protocol. Until a prospective randomized controlled trial is conducted, use of granulocyte transfusions in SAA patients will continue to be dictated by local institutional practice and clinical assessment of the patient.
KQ was the principal investigator, and takes primary responsibility for the paper. EW, SFL, and TJW participated in the patients care, data collection and analysis. COW performed the logistic regression analysis. PS and NSY participated in the patients care, discussions and writing the manuscript. The authors reported no potential conflicts of interest.
Received for publication April 16, 2009. Revision received May 20, 2009. Accepted for publication June 17, 2009.
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