Title: Bone Marrow Transplantation Stem Cell Transplantation
1Bone Marrow Transplantation (Stem Cell
Transplantation)
- Introduction
- 1950 first in marrow transplantation
- 1990, Edward Donnall Thomas Joseph Edward
Murray, winners of the Nobel prize - Allogenic BMT
- Autologous BMT
- peripheral blood stem cell transplantation
- umbilical cord blood transplantation
- minitransplantation (non-myeloablative)
- over 200 transplant centers worldwide
2Sources of Stem Cell
- Syngeneic
- Allogeneic
- Autologous
- Bone marrow
- PB
- Umbilical cord
3Antigen differences between the donor and the
recipient
- Human leukocyte antigen (serotyping or molecular
typing) - major histocompatibility complex (MHC) several
closely linked gene loci on 6p - Class I A, B, C
- Class II DR, DRW, DQ, DP
- other minor antigens HY
4Stem Cell Transplantation(Indications in
malignant diseases)
- acute leukemia
- high grade lymphoma, Hodgkins disease, sensitive
relapse - chronic myelogenous leukemia
- multiple myeloma (allogeneic)
- solid tumor (breast ca, germ cell tumor,
neuroblastoma) ?
5Stem Cell Transplantation (Indications in
non-malignant diseases)
- aplastic anemia
- severe thalalssemia
- congenital immune deficiency
- storage disease
6Allogeneic Stem Cell Transplantation
- eradicates of the marrow cells (marrow-ablating
C/T or R/T) - implantation of allogenic stem cells
- homing of the stem cells to the marrow cavity
- growth of the stem cells and recovery of the
blood cells
7Preconditioning Regimens
- Ablate recipients immunity
- Provide space for engraftment
- Regimens
- TBI 175 cGy x 6 d CTX 60 mg/Kg x 2 d mesna 60
mg/Kg iv 24h x 2 d. - Non-myeloablative CTX 60 mg/Kg x 2 d mesna 60
mg/Kg iv 24h x 2 d fludarabine 25 mg/m2 iv x 5
d
8Doses of Stem Cell Transplantation
- Allogeneic 1-5 x 108 nucleated cells/Kg
- Syngeneic 1-5 x 107 nucleated cells/Kg
- PBSCT 3-4 x 106 CD34 cells/Kg
- Autologous 1-2 x 106 CD34 cells/Kg
- 2-4 weeks for recovery, PBSCT more rapid recovery
of PMN and platelets
9Choice of Donors
- 1st choice syngeneic or matched sibling
- Partial matched relative, MUD (30-40 available)
if gt 2 HLA mismatch T-cell depletion - UCB (umbilical cord blood) less GVHD but cell
counts usually too low, high graft failure rate,
should be considered only if with 1.5-3 x 107
nucleated cells/Kg
10Non-myeloablative transplantion
- Use non-myeloablative conditioning agents
- Reduce toxicities
- Exploit Acute GVHD (graft versus host disease)
- Disadvantage graft failure, GVHD
11Complications of SCT
- rejection, graft failure
- GVHD (graft-versus-host disease)
- infection
- VOD
- obliterative bronchiolitis
- sepsis
- relapse of disease
12Complications of Cytoreductive Chemotherapy
- infection
- bacterial infection 50 of recipients
- aspergilloisis, candida
- risk factors Catheter, neutropenia,
immunosuppressant, mucositis (within 3 wks),
aspiration - cardiomyopathy CTX, anthracycline
- CNS complications, GB syndrome, neuropathy
cytarabine - hemorrhagic cystitis CTX, IFX
- tumor lysis syndrome
13Relapse and Rejection
- Rejection
- lt 1 in HLA-identical TBI
- incidence increases in increasing HLA disparity,
heavily transfused patients - Recurrence of primary malignancy
- early stage leukemia 20
- advanced leukemia 5070
- Second transplantation may be successful, but
mortality high
14GVHD (Graft versus Host Disease)
- Immunologic reaction of donor lymphocytes to
foreign antigens present on the surface of host
cells - foreign antigens
- HLA antigens
- minor antigens not detected by current typing
techniques
15Acute GVHD (1) incidence
- Within the first 3 months after BMT
- 2050 of HLA-identical, 80 of HLA non-identical
recipients - Mortality 50
- incidence increases with
- patient age
- degree of HLA disparity
16Acute GVHD (2)manifestations
- Histology lymphocytic infiltration of the
epidermis and GI tract - fever
- dermatitis diffuse macular dermatitis, bullas,
desquamation - enteritis cramping abdominal pain, watery to
bloody diarrhea - hepatitis jaundice, cholestasis, hepatocellular
necrosis - infection frequently related to mortality
- hyperacute GVHD (no prophylaxis) 7 days after
BMT exfoliative dermatitis, shock, hyperpyrexia
17Acute GVHD (3) immunology
- Effector cells donor cytotoxic T lymphocytes
- in response to host histocompatibility antigens
- lymphokines recruit mononuclear cells
- Donor T lymphocyte removal can lessen GVHD but
increase graft rejection and recurrent malignancy
18Chronic GVHD (1) incidence
- develops gt 3 months after BMT
- 2050 of allografts, usually following acute
GVHD - 2030 develops de novo, without prior acute GVHD
19Chronic GVHD (2) manifestations like collagen
diseases
- skin pigmentation, sclerosis
- mucosa lichenoid oral plaque, esophagitis,
polyserositis, oral and eye sicca syndrome - liver elevated ALP and GOT in 90 cases
- chronic wasting due to anorexia
- chronic pulmonary disease 1020 (diffuse
interstitial pnuemonitis and obliterative
bronchiloitis) - death usually caused by infection, low mortality
related to de novo onset less tissue
involvement.
20Chronic GVHD (3) immunology
- minor histocompatibility antigen difference and
deficient thymic function - increase in nonspecific suppressor lymphocyte
function - lack specific suppression of cytotoxic reactivity
to host alloantigens - cytokine mediators propagate autoimmune-like
tissue injury - chronic immunodeficiency, increases opportunistic
and other fatal infection
21GVHD Prophylaxis
- Prevention is of paramount importance, no
prevention ? 100 develop acute GVHD - GVHD may lead to fatal hepatic failure, GI
bleeding, diffuse exfoliative dermatitis,
increase CMV enteritis, pneumonia, bacterial and
fungal infection - prophylaxis with MTX cyclosporine or
tacrolimus? acute GVHD decreases to 25
22GVHD management
- Diagnosis needs biopsy of skin, liver or GI tract
- Treatment is difficult methylprednisolone 2
mg/Kg/day, ATG, continue MTX cyclosporine,
anti-T lymphocyte monoclonal antibodies - surveillance for infection, prophylactic
antibiotics - adequate nutrition TPN. Opiate for cramping pain
and diarrhea - care for bleeding, especially GI bleeding
23Hepatic Veno-occusive Disease (1) incidence
- lt 2 of BMT without TBI
- 2060 of BMT with C/T and TBI
- higher rate in older age and prior hepatitis
- mortality 30, no effective treatment
24Hepatic Veno-occusive Disease (2) presentation
- occurs within 2 weeks of BMT
- weight gain with peripheral edema
- increased GOT, GPT, jaundice
- ascites
- painful hepatomegaly
- metabolic encephalopathy and coma
- hepatorenal syndrome
25Hepatic Failure (diagnosis)
- hepatic VOD, GVHD (majority), drugs toxicity
(cyclosporine, antibiotics, antimetabolites),
infections (hepatitis B, C, CMV, HSV, EBV, and
bacterial, fungal) - VOD GOT peaks within 2 weeks
- GVHD occur after day 20, ALP much higher than in
VOD - Dx by image studies, biopsy, culture
26Hepatic Failure (management)
- VOD
- restriction of fluid and Na, judicious use of
loop diuretics (decrease ascites but avoid
compromising renal perfusion) blood products
transfusion, hemodialysis may be needed - anticoagulant or thrombolytic therapy risk in
thrombocytopenia - GVHD treatment of GVHD, management of hepatic
encephalopathy
27Pneumonia (Incidence and Pathogenesis)
- 4060 of recipients
- infectious pneumonia (50)
- bacteria
- fungi (aspergillus, candida )
- CMV ( 60) 30150 days after BMT
- HSV, VZV, effectively prevented by acyclovir PCP
by bactrim - noninfectious lung infiltrates
- pulmonary hemorrhage, edema, ARDS, idiopathic
interstitial pneumonia, thromboemboli, leukemia
28Pneumonia (Presentation-1)
- within 30 days
- Focal patchy infiltrates bacterial or fungal
infection - Diffuse infiltrates pulmonary edema, ARDS,
hemorrhage, acute GVHD, often progress to
respiratory failure
29Pneumonia (Presentation-2)
- beyond 30 days viral pneumonia (CMV), idiopathic
interstitial pneumonia, PCP, often progress to
respiratory failure - late gt 100 days chronic GVHD, (CMV, VZV, PCP
less frequent), idiopathic pneumonia due to late
radiation or cyclophosphamide
30Obliterative Bronchiloitis
- 10 of recipients
- among long term survival of chronic GVHD
- manifestations
- PFT airway obstruction, CXR may be normal
- insidious progression of DOE, wheezing, often
progresses to respiratory failure and death. - progression rate predicts the outcome,
- mx control of chronic GVHD
31Pneumonia (diagnostic approach 1)
- Diffuse infiltrate
- Early 30 days ? empiric broad-spectrum
antibiotics, diuresis and Na restriction (may
guided by pulmonary artery wedge measurement)
correction of bleeding disorder. If deteriorates
?bronchoscopy BAL - After 30 days bronchoscopy BAL, detection for
viral, especially CMV, bacterial, fungal, and
cytologic stains, culture. Thoracotomy is
reserved for nondiagnostic BAL with high risk of
infection.
32Pneumonia (diagnostic approach 2)
- Focal lesion
- High probability of bacterial or fungal
infection. - Bronchopheumonia ?bronchoscopy BAL, peripheral
lesions ? percutaneous needle aspiration biopsy,
open lung biopsy or complete surgical resection
33Pneumonia (treatment 1)
- Bacterial
- high prevalence of coagulase - staphylococcus
- late (chronic GVHD) pneumococcal, needs PCN or
bactrim. - Viral CMV pneumonia fatal in gt 85, treated with
ganciclovir 2.5 mg/Kg q8h for gt2 weeks,
cytotect 400500 mg/Kg 35 times weekly for 23
weeks.
34Pneumonia (treatment 2)
- Other herpes viruses ?iv acyclovir 500 mg/m2 q8h
for gt7 days - RSV and parainfluenza ?aerosolized ribavirin
- Fungal aspergillus, mucor, rhizopus high
mortality, candida (common) ? iv amphotericin B
10 mg/Kg/d until resolution. Surgical resection
of localized lesion. - Other infections PCP, legionella, nocardia,
treatment same as in usual patients
35Idiopathic pneumonia
- Early idiopathic pneumonia
- no proven treatment
- biopsy diffuse alveolar damage
- Late idiopathic interstitial pneumonia
- pathology mononuclear cells interstitial
infiltrates, may be immunologically mediated
process - management same as managing idiopathic pulmonary
fibrosis, immunosuppression to control the GVHD
36Infection Control
- oral bactrim for the 2 weeks prior to BMT, twice
weekly after PMN engraftment - laminar airflow (LAF) environment for neutropenia
(reduce infection, but reduce mortality only in
aplastic anemia) - oral nonabsorbable antibiotics for GI
decontamination (eliminate G(), not G(-)) - LAF decreases incidence of acute GVHD
- prophylactic acyclovir after BMT suppress HSV
infection
37Sepsis Syndrome
- bacteremia in 50 marrow recipients
- G(-), G() coagulase - staphylococci, yeast
(candida) - viral infection (CMV) seen in previous infected
patients who develop acute GVHD. CMV viremia
high cardiac output, low SVR, sepsis syndrome - coexist with acute GVHD
- empiric antibiotic coverage, modified with
culture results and endemic infection and
resistance pattern - careful iv volume expansion