Abstract
EBV-associated post-transplant lymphoproliferative disease (PTLD) following Alemtuzumab-based allo-SCT is a relatively uncommon and challenging clinical problem but has not received detailed study in a large cohort. Quantitative-PCR (qPCR) monitoring for EBV reactivation post allo-SCT is now commonplace but its diagnostic and predictive value remains unclear. Sixty-nine patients with PTLD following Alemtuzumab-based allo-SCT were studied. Marked clinicopathological heterogeneity was evident; lymphadenopathy was frequently absent, whereas advanced extranodal disease was common. The median viral load at clinical presentation was 49 300 copies/mL (50–65 200 000 copies/mL) and, notably, 23% and 45% of cases, respectively, had less than or equal to10 000 and less than or equal to40 000 copies/mL. The overall response rate to rituximab as first-line therapy was 70%. For rituximab failures, chemotherapy was ineffectual but DLIs were successful. A four-parameter prognostic index predicted response to therapy (OR 0.30 (0.12–0.74); P=0.009] and PTLD mortality (hazard ratio (HR) 1.81 (1.12–2.93) P=0.02) on multivariate analysis. This is the largest detailed series of EBV-associated PTLD after allo-SCT. At clinical presentation, EBV-qPCR values are frequently below customary thresholds for pre-emptive therapy, challenging current paradigms for monitoring and intervention. A four-point score identifies a proportion of patients at risk of rituximab-refractory disease for whom alternative therapy is needed.
Original language | English |
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Pages (from-to) | 280-286 |
Number of pages | 7 |
Journal | Bone Marrow Transplantation |
Volume | 49 |
Early online date | 11 Nov 2013 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 2014 |
Keywords
- alemtuzumab dli ebv immunotherapy ptld sct bone-marrow-transplantation high-risk preemptive rituximab disease reconstitution lymphoma reactivation lymphocytes prevention management