Haematologica, Vol 94, Issue 9, 1312-1315 doi:10.3324/haematol.2009.006916
Copyright © 2009 by Ferrata Storti Foundation
Stem Cell Transplantation |
Improved outcome of patients older than 30 years receiving HLA-identical sibling hematopoietic stem cell transplantation for severe acquired aplastic anemia using fludarabine-based conditioning: a comparison with conventional conditioning regimen
Sébastien Maury1,
Andrea Bacigalupo2,
Paolo Anderlini3,
Mahmoud Aljurf4,
Judith Marsh5,
Gérard Socié6,
Rosi Oneto2,
Jakob R. Passweg7 on behalf of the Severe Aplastic Anemia Working Party of the European Group for Blood and Marrow Transplantation (EBMT-SAAWP)
1 Department of Hematology, Groupe Henri-Mondor Albert-Chenevier, Université Paris 12, Faculté de Médecine, Créteil, France
2 Department of Hematology, Azienda Ospedaliera Universitaria San Martino, Genova, Italy
3 Department of Stem Cell Transplantation and Cellular Therapy, M.D. Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, TX, USA
4 King Faisal Specialist Hospital and Research Center, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia
5 Department of Haematological Medicine, Kings College Hospital, London, UK
6 Department of Hematology, Stem Cell Transplantation, Hôpital Saint-Louis, Paris, France
7 Department of Hematology, Geneva University Hospital, Geneva, Switzerland
Correspondence: Sébastien Maury, Service dHématologie Clinique, CHU Henri Mondor, 51 av. du Mal de Lattre de Tassigny, 94010 Créteil cedex, France. E-mail:sebastien.maury{at}hmn.aphp.fr

ABSTRACT
Older age is a limitation for HLA-identical sibling hematopoietic
stem cell transplantation (HSCT) as first-line therapy for severe
acquired idiopathic aplastic anemia (SAA). Fludarabine (Flu)-based
conditioning might improve outcome in older patients. We analyzed
retrospectively 30 patients older than 30 years receiving such
reduced-intensity conditioning HSCT according to recommendations
of the European Group for Blood and Marrow Transplantation (EBMT)
and compared their outcome to a control group receiving the
standard regimen (cyclophosphamide+/–antithymocyte globulin)
over the same study period (1998–2007). Patients conditioned
with Flu had a higher probability of overall survival than the
control group (
p=0.04) when adjusting for recipients
age. This might be related to a trend towards a reduced incidence
of graft failure in patients receiving Flu (0%
vs. 11%,
p=0.09),
while no difference was observed regarding graft-versus-host
disease incidence. Flu-based conditioning regimen may reduce
the negative impact of age in older patients with SAA receiving
an HLA-identical sibling HSCT.
Key words: aplastic anemia, stem cell transplantation, conditioning regimen, fludarabine.

Introduction
Allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT) from
an HLA-identical sibling donor is the first-line treatment of
choice for newly diagnosed patients with severe acquired idiopathic
aplastic anemia (SAA) if they are younger than 30–40 years.
1,2 However, for older patients aged 30–40 years or over,
the decision whether to treat with immunosuppressive therapy
(IST), namely antithymocyte globulin (ATG) and cyclosporine,
or to transplant upfront with an HLA-identical sibling donor
remains a key question. Two large studies from the Seattle group
3 and the European Group for Blood and Marrow Transplantation
(EBMT) SAA Working Party
4 that examined survival by age group
did not show an advantage for either HSCT or IST in older patients.
This was notably related to a lower long-term survival after
HSCT for older patients, i.e. over 40 years in the Seattle cohort
3 and over 20 years in the European study.
4 The negative impact
of older age at transplant has been further confirmed in several
other studies.
5–7 In one of those published more recently,
7 recipients older age was identified as one factor associated
with a lower survival in multivariate analysis, with 54% of
patients older than 30 years surviving long term.
The standard conditioning regimen for HLA identical sibling HSCT relies on cyclophosphamide (Cy) combined or not with ATG. In order to improve survival in patients older than 30–40 years, the use of less cytotoxic but more immunosuppressive regimens including low-dose cyclophosphamide (below the standard dose of 200 mg/kg) in combination with ATG, while adding fludarabine (Flu), might be an option to explore with the aim of reducing transplant-related mortality.8,9 Such Flu-based regimens have been explored in various non-malignant diseases without conferring a significant survival advantage when compared to conventional myeloablative regimens.10 In patients with SAA specifically, several previous case reports11,12 or non-comparative studies13–16 have reported encouraging results in the setting of HLA-matched related HSCT. The EBMT SAA working party has recently reported a favorable experience using Flu-based HSCT in SAA patients transplanted with unrelated (n=33) or family mismatched (n=5) donors.17 In combination with ATG and very low-dose Cy (1200 mg/m2, i.e. approximately 20 mg/kg), such a preparative regimen provided a 2-year actuarial survival of 73%. In view of these encouraging results, and given the need to improve outcome for older patients after HLA-identical sibling HSCT, the SAA Working Party of the EBMT proposed to apply such a conditioning regimen in patients older than 30 years receiving a matched related HSCT. Here we analyze 30 patients older than 30 years treated according to this protocol and compare their outcome to a control group of similar patients registered in the EBMT database receiving the standard Cy ± ATG regimen over the same study period (1998–2007).

Design and Methods
In the Flu group, all but 4 patients received the conditioning
regimen according to the EBMT SAA-WP recommendation associating
Flu (30 mg/m
2/day
x 4 days), low-dose Cy (300 mg/m
2/day
x 4
days,) and ATG (Thymoglobuline
TM 3.75 mg/kg/day
x 4 days), in
6 different centers. The 4 other patients, all from an additional
center, received Flu combined with Cy but without ATG. The control
group comprised patients older than 30 years receiving a first
transplant using Cy alone (n=121) or Cy + ATG (n=118) in 109
European centers. Update of data was performed as of August
2008.
Patients and transplant characteristics of the 2 groups are compared in Table 1. No significant difference was observed regarding the detection of a PNH clone, the median interval between diagnosis and HSCT, or the proportion of patients who received a course of immunosuppressive therapy prior to HSCT, the source of stem cells and graft-versus-host disease (GVHD) prophylaxis. However, patients in the Flu group were significantly older at the time of HSCT (46 vs. 39 years, p<0.01). Additionally, 5 patients in the Flu group were included after failure of a first standard allogeneic HSCT from the same donor. These received conditioning with Cy (200 mg/kg) combined with ATG (n=4) or TBI (n=1, 8 Gray in 3 fractions) for their first transplant. Differences in categorical variables were evaluated by
2 analysis. The Fishers exact test was also used to confirm the
2 test, when at least one factor modality related to less than 5 individuals. Comparisons of continuous variable medians were performed using a Mann-Whitney test. Probabilities of overall survival were estimated from the time of transplantation according to the Kaplan-Meier product-limit method and compared using the log rank statistic. Probabilities of overall survival adjusted for recipient age were estimated according to a Cox regression model. All tests were two-sided.

Results and Discussion
With comparable median follow-up of surviving patients of 49
and 51 months, respectively, patients receiving a Flu-based
regimen had a non-significant higher 5-year probability of survival
than the control group (77±8%
vs. 60±3%,
p=0.14
by the log-rank test). As the 2 groups differed significantly
by age, outcome is presented in a Cox regression model adjusting
for recipients age and graphically as age-adjusted survival
curves (
Figure 1 and Footnote). Adjusted for age, the Flu group
had a significant lower relative risk (RR) of death compared
to the control group (RR=0.44 [95% CI, 0.20–0.97],
p=0.04).
Of note, age entered as a continuous variable was highly significantly
associated with survival, even in this selected group of patients
over the age of 30 (
p=0.002).
Possible reasons for better survival in the Flu group were found
in a trend towards a lower incidence of primary graft failure
in comparison with the control group (0%
vs. 11% of cases,
p=0.09,
Table 1). This was noted despite the fact that 5 out of the
30 patients receiving a Flu-based regimen had previously experienced
graft failure following a standard conditioning HSCT from the
same donor. All of these patients primarily fully engrafted
(one experienced secondary graft failure with autologous reconstitution),
suggesting that the addition of Flu had reduced the host-versus-graft
reaction, as previously reported in such patients,
16 even when
heavily immunized after repeated transfusions.
13 This effect
of Flu should also be further explored in light of a recent
study which failed to demonstrate a significant contribution
of ATG in reducing graft failure.
18 All surviving patients in
the Flu group were transfusion independent or independent from
other SAA specific treatment at last follow-up.
Conversely, no difference was observed regarding the incidence of acute and chronic GVHD between the 2 groups of patients (Table 1). Of note, all but 2 patients among those who received Flu and engrafted long term (29 out of 30) had full donor chimerism as determined by molecular or karyotypic analyses. These last 2 had persistent mixed chimerism, indicating that in this setting, as also reported after standard HSCT,19 persistent mixed chimerism may be accompanied by normal blood cell counts. Seven out of 30 patients died in the Flu group, 6 of those being older than 40 years. Figure 2 shows survival in the Flu group by age (< and > 40 years). The main cause of death was infection (5 out of 7). Specific attention should be given to potential Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) reactivation in these patients since one of these died of EBV-associated lymphoproliferative disease, as also previously reported in a 62-year old patient receiving the same conditioning regimen.12
In conclusion, we show in this comparative study that a Flu-based
regimen might be a way to improve outcome of older SAA patients
after HLA-matched related HSCT, as also suggested for unrelated
HSCT.
17 These results reinforce encouraging survival estimates
observed in previously reported studies without a comparative
group, using such Flu-based regimens independently of patient
age.
13–16 In older patients, the comparison of Flu-based
to standard HSCT will certainly need to be further evaluated
in a still larger number of patients to allow a definitive conclusion
to be drawn.

Acknowledgments
Romaine Viollier, Sandra Acholonu and Grace-Julia Okoroji for
data management.

Footnotes
Authorship and Disclosures
SM, AB, PA, MA, JM, GS and JRP designed the study; RO provided data management; SM and JRP performed the statistical analysis and prepared the manuscript; all authors participated in interpretation of data and approved the final manuscript.
The authors reported no potential conflict of interest.
Received for publication February 4, 2009.
Revision received March 26, 2009.
Accepted for publication March 26, 2009.

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