Haematologica, Vol 94, Issue 9, 1329-1330 doi:10.3324/haematol.2009.006817
Copyright © 2009 by Ferrata Storti Foundation
Stem Cell Transplantation |
Second bone marrow transplantation for patients with thalassemia: risks and benefits
Polina Stepensky1,
Reuven Or2,
Michael Y Shapira2,
Shoshana Revel-Vilk1,
Jerry Stein3,
Igor B. Resnick2
1 Department of Pediatric Hematology-Oncology, Hadassah -Hebrew University Medical Center, Jerusalem
2 Department of Bone Marrow Transplantation and Cancer Immunotherapy, Hadassah, Hebrew University Medical Center, Jerusalem
3 Department of Pediatric Hematology Oncology and BMT Unit, Schneider Childrens Medical Center of Israel, Petah-Tikva, Israel
Correspondence: Igor B. Resnick, Bone Marrow Transplantation and Cancer Immunotherapy Dept., Hadassah Hebrew University Medical Center, Sharett Bld., 3rd floor PO Box 12000, Jerusalem, 91120 Israel. E-mail:gashka{at}hadassah.org.il
Key words: thalassemia, bone marrow transplantation, graft versus host disease.
A recent paper by Angelucci and Baronciani1 discussed numerous aspects of thalassemia major with special attention to two dilemmas. The first is the choice between transplantation, which is still defined as the only curative treatment but bears chances of severe complications such as chronic extensive graft versus host disease (GVHD), and conservative treatment which will eventually lead to death. The second is the influence of the underdeveloped society setting on treatment possibilities. There is an additional unique group of patients that represent 10–20% of all transplanted patients, who to date have received little consideration in the literature: those who lost their graft. It seems that in these cases, marked erythropoietic hyperplasia contribute more to the graft failure than a robust host immune system. Gaziev et al. have shown improved results after a second BMT in thallasemic patients, with an improved overall survival (OS) of 49% in older series2 and 79%3 in a more recent cohort study.
Twenty-seven of our 107 thalassemic patients transplanted from 1981 to 2008 experienced graft failure. In 18 patients thalassemia recurred; in 10 of these cases autologous back-up stem cell infusion was given due to primary graft failure. Nine patients proceeded to a second allogeneic BMT using the same donor (Table 1). As we did not include routine liver biopsy in our pre-transplant evaluation, we cannot accurately stratify our patients according to the Pesaro risk classification system. However, all of these 9 patients had hepatomegaly and inadequate iron chelation and, therefore, could be stratified to at least class II risk group, while we cannot rule out that some of them belonged to a higher risk category.
Of 18 patients who did not undergo a second transplantation,
2 died: one from veno-occlusive disease, sepsis and disseminated
intravascular coagulation (DIC), and one from brain toxoplasmosis;
one patient suffered from a severe peritransplant complication
requiring frontal lobectomy due to intracranial hemorrhage during
post-transplant aplasia. Fourteen patients are alive, transfusion
dependent, treated by chelation and in good clinical condition.
Nine patients received additional allogeneic hematopoietic stem
cell therapy for treatment of graft failure: median follow-up
is 24 (2–98) months from the second BMT. Seven BMTs were
performed as a second approach to establish normal hematopoiesis;
in 2 other cases BMT were performed as an emergency in the context
of graft failure. Of these 9, 3 patients died from early complications
of the second BMT (aGVHD, DIC, pulmonary hemorrhage). Two of
them underwent a second BMT within six months of the first.
Six of the 9 patients developed grade II–IV aGVHD, which
progressed in 2 cases to extensive chronic GVHD. Two patients
of the 6 surviving experienced severe life-threatening events
(LTE) (
Table 2). One patient experienced thalassemia recurrence
with gradually decreasing donor chimerism to 10% and development
of blood transfusion dependence. Another transplant resulted
in 40% stable donor chimerism and moderate anemia (Hb

8 g/L),
without bony deformities or persistent transfusion dependence.
The rate of aGVHD (6 out of 9) and LTEs (5 out of 9) were high
after the second allogeneic transplantation; of 9 patients undergoing
second allogeneic transplant 6 are alive, 2 are suffering from
chronic GVHD; only 4 are fully transfusion independent, and
just one single patient (n. 9) had no LTE or chronic health
problems (
Table 2).
Successful BMT for patients with β-thalassemia is curative
and results in better quality of life than conservative treatment.
4,5 In contrast, conservative treatment is still evolving;
1,5 recent
advances in oral chelators, improved blood banking techniques,
and aggressive endocrine management currently allow for prolonged,
symptom free survival. Patients experiencing graft failure following
BMT are candidates for a second BMT, but re-transplant is fraught
with risks. Despite the relatively mild preparation regimens
administered to our patients, mortality and morbidity were unacceptably
high. Gaziev and colleagues
3 proposed using a more myelo- and
immunoablative preparative regimen for second transplants, and
reported a better overall survival rate: 79%
vs. 70% in our
series. However, re-transplant with its high risk of treatment-related
mortality and irreversible life-threatening complications must
be carefully considered in the light of the recent improvements
in long-term conservative treatment in children and adults with
thalassemia. Patients failing BMT with subsequent disease recurrence
demonstrated better short-term survival and will likely have
a better long-term prognosis (life expectancy and low rate of
serious complications) despite their dependence on transfusion
and chelation therapy.
Our impression is that a second BMT should be considered only after a sufficient interval has elapsed from the first transplant, and after the patient has adequately recovered from any adverse effects. As opposed to papers quoted by Angelucci and Baronciani, with one thalassemic patient described in each,6,7 in our series of 20 patients transplanted using non-myeloablative conditioning, thalassemia free survival reached 80% with no TRM. Therefore, this approach must be considered as an option for the second BMT.8 Undoubtedly, collection of additional data from an ongoing EBMT retrospective analysis and sharing of data between individual centers will help clinicians faced with the management of patients with graft failure following BMT for thalassemia.

References
- Angelucci E, Baronciani D. Allogeneic stem cell transplantation for thalassemia major. Haematologica 2008;93:1780-4.[Free Full Text]
- Gaziev D, Polchi P, Lucarelli G, Galimberti M, Sodani P, Angelucci E, et al. Second marrow transplants for graft failure in patients with thalassemia. Bone Marrow Transplant 1999;24:1299-306.[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline]
- Gaziev J, Sodani P, Lucarelli G, Polchi P, Marktel S, Paciaroni K, et al. Second hematopoietic SCT in patients with thalassemia recurrence following rejection of the first graft. Bone Marrow Transplant 2008;42:397-404.[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline]
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- Resnick IB, Aker M, Tsirigotis P, Shapira MY, Abdul-Hai A, Bitan M, et al. Allogeneic stem cell transplantation from matched related and unrelated donors in thalassemia major patients using a reduced toxicity fludarabine-based regimen. Bone Marrow Transplant 2007;40:957-64.[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline]