Title: VENO-OCCLUSIVE DISEASE AND OTHER ACUTE COMPLICATIONS OF HSCT
1VENO-OCCLUSIVE DISEASE AND OTHER ACUTE
COMPLICATIONS OF HSCT
Dr Sunday Ocheni Consultant Haematologist, Departm
ent of Haematology Immunology University of
Nigeria, Enugu Campus, Mobile Nos
234-7039222313, 234-8185766742 E-mails
kcjsocheni_at_yahoo.com, sunday.ocheni_at_unn.edu.ng
2ACUTE COMPLICATIONS OF HSCT
- Several complications occur following HSCT
- These complications arise primarily from the
effects of A Pre-transplant high dose
chemotherapy ? radiotherapy conditioning
strategies. - Such complications include mucositis, pain,
nausea, vomiting, haemorrhagic cystitis, hair
loss, pancytopaenia, and those resulting from
damage to the vascular endothelium
3ACUTE COMPLICATIONS OF HSCT
- Early complications resulting from damage to the
vascular endothelium include -
- Hepatic veno-occlusive disease
- Capillary leak syndrome
- Engraftment syndrome
- Diffuse alveolar haemorrhage
- Thrombotic microangiopathy
- Indiopathic pneumonia syndrome
- Multi-organ dysfunction syndrome
4ACUTE COMPLICATIONS OF HSCT
- B Complications due to the genetic and
immunologic disparities between the host and the
donor. - These include graft rejection, grant-versus-host
disease (GvHD) and prolonged immune system
dysfunctions.
5ACUTE COMPLICATIONS OF HSCT
- INTRODUCTION
- The high doses of RT and/or CT included in
conditioning regimens affect all the pts organs
and tissues??several early late secondary
effects of variable intensity - VOD is a potentially fatal syndrome of painful
hepatomegaly, jaundice and fluid retention
occurring 35-40 days post-HSCT as a result of
conditioning regimen-related hepatic toxicity - The term Sinusoidal obstruction syndrome is
preferred because damaged sinusoidal endothelium
sloughs and then obstructs the hepatic
circulations, injuring centrilobular hepatocytes
6VENO-OCCLUSIVE DISEASE
- EPIDEMIOLOGY
- Incidence 5-70 in different reports, depending
on the diagnostic criteria used, the population
studied (eg, pediatric vs adult), and the
differences in conditioning therapy used. - Contributes to considerable mortality morbidity
7VENO-OCCLUSIVE DISEASE
- PATHOGENESIS
- After SCT the high dose cytoreductive therapy
used in patients who have a particular
susceptibility, produces endothelial injury in
both sinusoids and small hepatic venules. - This leads to activation of the coagulation
cascade, and clot formation. - Fibrin-related plugs, intracellular fluid
entrapment and cellular debris progressively
occlude sinusoids
8VENO-OCCLUSIVE DISEASE
- PATHOGENESIS 2
- This leads to intrahepatic post sinusoidal portal
hypertension, responsible for the clinical signs
of fluid retention (weight increase),
hepatomegaly, ascites and jaundice. - Usually fibrosis occurs several weeks after the
onset of the disease. - Post mortem studies have shown that hepatic
venules are partially or completely obliterated
by subendothelial collagen fibers
9VENO-OCCLUSIVE DISEASE
PATHOGENESIS 3 The pathogenesis is complex,
involving cytokine release, endothelial injury,
hemostatic activation, and hepatic drug
detoxification through the glutathione
pathway. Hepatocellular necrosis, fibrosis, and
vascular occlusion ultimately lead to liver
failure, hepatorenal syndrome, MOF, and death.
10VENO-OCCLUSIVE DISEASE
- Pretransplantation factors
- Preexisting liver dysfunction (elevated
transaminases, fibrosis or cirrhosis, or low
albumin level - Presence of hepatic metastases
- Advanced age
- Prior radiation treatment of the liver17
- Use of vancomycin or acyclovir in the
pretransplantation period17 - Previous stem cell transplantation17
- Prior therapy with gemtuzumab ozogamicin
(Mylotarg)14 - ? Viral hepatitis C39-41
- ? Decreased protein C42
- ? Factor V Leiden mutation, prothrombin 20210
mutation
11VENO-OCCLUSIVE DISEASE
- Transplantation-related factors
- High-dose conditioning regimens
- Allogeneic transplantation (compared with
autologous - transplantation)
- Busulfan for conditioning, and combined with
cyclophosphamide - Total body irradiation, especially combined with
cyclophosphamide (depends on total dose and
fractionation) - Grafts from unrelated donors or related HLA
mismatched transplants - Methotrexate as part of graft-vs-host disease
prophylaxis - ? Cytomegalovirus infection
12VENO-OCCLUSIVE DISEASE
- CLASSICAL VOD
- Usually occurs from days 1 to 21 after SCT
with regimens containing cyclophosphamide - Triad of
- Weight gain with oedema and ascites caused by
fluid retention not attributable to an excessive
fluid administration - Tender hepatomegaly and/or right upper quadrant
pain - Hyperbilirubinaemia/jaundice without any
- known cause
13VENO-OCCLUSIVE DISEASE
LATE VOD Same clinical manifestations as
Classical VOD Usually after conditioning with
agents such as busulphan, melphalan or
thiotepa May occur after patients
discharge CHRONIC VOD Occurs outside of the HSCT
setting eg following chronic assumption of
pyrrolizidine alkaloids contained in Senecio tea
(South Africa).
14VENO-OCCLUSIVE DISEASE
- VOD WITH MULTI-ORGAN FAILURE
- Same clinical manifestations plus
- Thrombocytopaenia (refractoriness to platelet
transfusions) - Pleural effusion
- Pulmonary infiltrates
- Progressive renal, cardiac and pulmonary failure,
confusion, encephalopathy, and coma
15VENO-OCCLUSIVE DISEASE Diagnosis
DIAGNOSTIC CRITERIA OF VENO OCCLUSIVE DISEASE
AFTER SCT SEATTLE CRITERIA Within the first 20
days following HSCT, the presence of two or more
of the following 1 Hyperbilirubinaemia
34mmol/L ( 2 mg/dL) 2 Hepatomegaly or right
upper quadrant pain of liver origin 3 Unexplained
weight gain (gt 2 of baseline bodyweight) because
of fluid accumulation BALTIMORE CRITERIA In the
first 21 days after HSCT Elevated total serum
bilirubin at 34mmol/L ( 2 mg/dL) AND two or
more of the following three criteria 1 Tender
hepatomegaly 2 Weight gain 5 from baseline 3
Ascites
16VENO-OCCLUSIVE DISEASE Severity
Classification of severity of VOD after HSCT
according to weight increase (), bilirubin
concentration peak, presence of peripheral edema
and ascites (mean sd)
Mild
Moderate
Severe Weight gain ( increase)
7.0 3.5 10.1 5.3
15.5 9.2 Maximum bilirubin (mg/dL)
4.7 2.9 7.9 6.6
26.6 15.2 Percentage with peripheral edema
23 70
85 Percentage with ascites
5
16 48 Day 100
mortality (all causes) () 3
20
98
17VENO-OCCLUSIVE DISEASE Differential Diagnosis
- Other liver diseases are common after BMT
- However, the presence of weight gain and fluid
retention is usually sufficient to differentiate
VOD from other causes of early liver dysfunction. - Differentials
- A) After allogeneic BMT
- 1. Acute liver GVHD
- 2. Cyclosporine-induced hepatotoxicity
- B) After autologous or allogeneic BMT
- 1. Fungal infiltration of the liver
- 2. Viral hepatitis
- 3. Cholangitis lenta, e.g. during sepsis
- 4. Drug (trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole, some
third-generation - penicillins, fluconazole and itraconazole)
induced liver dysfunction - 5. Constrictive pericarditis and right congestive
heart failure - 6. Persistent tumor infiltration of the liver
18VENO-OCCLUSIVE DISEASE Therapy
- No specific standard treatment modality for VOD
- Studies on the use of many drugs to treat VOD are
limited to case reports and small series. - The primary goal of treatment is to normalize the
flow in the sinusoidal vessels and veins by
controlling the vasculitis and fibrin deposition.
19VENO-OCCLUSIVE DISEASE Therapy2
- Treatment Strategies so far
- Low-dose tissue plasminogen activator (t-PA) has
been used to increase fibrin degradation.
Response only in lt one third of pts - Antithrombin III (ATIII) replacement
- ATIII administered in combination with
heparin/t-PA - Promising experimental drug is defibrotide---- a
single-stranded polydeoxyribonucleotide derived
from porcine tissue that possesses
antithrombotic, thrombolytic, anti-inflammatory,
and anti-ischemic properties.
20VENO-OCCLUSIVE DISEASE Therapy3
- Defibrotide----6.25mg/kg iv in 2 h infusion q 6 h
x 14 days ? 50-55 CR in severe VOD with MOF
and 47-60 of survival at day 100 with no
secondary effects - SYMPTOMATIC TREATMENT
- Restriction of salt and water intake diuretics
- Maintain intravascular volume and renal perfusion
by means of albumin, plasma expanders and
transfusions (PCV ?30) - Analgesia
- Paracentesis/thoracocentesis
- Haemodialysis/haemofiltration
- Mechanical Ventilation
- Surgical shunt
- Liver Transplantation
21VENO-OCCLUSIVE DISEASE Prophylaxis
- Because there in no effective treatment for the
syndrome, its prevention is critical - Substitution of fludarabine for cyclophosphamide
- Use of RIC regimens decreases the risk of VOD
- Low-dose heparin decreases the overall incidence
of VOD - 100 U/ kg/d of unfractionated heparin started 1
week before transplantation and continued until
day 30 decreases the overall incidence of VOD by
nearly 10.
22VENO-OCCLUSIVE DISEASE Prophylaxis2
- When possible, delay HSCT if an acute hepatitis
exists - Adjust Busulfan dose or use iv
- Fractionate TBI
- Minimize exposure to potential hepatotoxic (ie,
cyclosporine) and nephrotoxic agents (ie,
aminoglycosides). - Judiciously manage the sodium and water balance.
- Use of LMWH Enoxaparin 40mg/day in place of
unfractionated heparin decreases the risk of
bleeding episodes and has the advantage of
intermittent dosing.
23VENO-OCCLUSIVE DISEASE Conclusion
- Hepatic VOD is a formidable challenge both for
patients undergoing HSCT and for their
physicians. - Hepatic VOD contributes considerably to
transplantation-related morbidity and mortality. - A high clinical index of suspicion is needed to
correctly and consistently identify patients with
VOD. - Prophylactic interventions are very critical
- Therapeutic agents such as defibrotide still
under trial
24YOU ARE A WONDERFUL AUDIENCE