Study reveals CML patients likely to benefit from HSCT long-term
The prevalence of grade 3/4 chronic health conditions was significantly higher among patients than among siblings—38% and 24%, respectively (P<0.0001).
The odds ratio (OR)—adjusted for age, sex, race, and socioeconomic status—was 2.7 (P<0.0001).
The cumulative incidence of any grade 3/4 condition at 20 years after HSCT was 47.2% among patients. Common conditions were diabetes (14.9%), second malignancies (12.6%), and coronary artery disease (10%).
The researchers found the risk of grade 3/4 morbidity was significantly higher for the following patient groups:
- Those age 45 and older (hazard ratio [HR]=3.3, P<0.0001)
- Patients with a matched, unrelated donor (HR=3.0, P<0.0001)
- Those who received peripheral blood or cord blood grafts as opposed to bone marrow (HR=2.7, P=0.006).
(This analysis was adjusted for race/ethnicity, sex, education, household income, insurance, cGVHD, and conditioning regimen).
Lower risk
To identify subpopulations with a reduced risk of long-term morbidity, the researchers calculated the risk in various CML patient groups compared to siblings.
The overall OR for CML patients compared with siblings was 2.7 (P<0.0001).
The OR for patients in first chronic phase who underwent HSCT before the age of 45 and had an MRD was 1.5 (P=0.1).
The OR for CML patients in first chronic phase who underwent HSCT before the age of 45, had an MRD, and received Bu/Cy conditioning was 0.8 (P=0.7).
“[W]e found that patients who received a matched, related donor transplant under the age of 45, with busulfan/cyclophosphamide, carried the same burden of morbidity as the sibling cohort,” Wu said. “These findings could help inform decisions regarding therapeutic options for the management of CML.”
Wu noted that the limited sample size in this study prevented the researchers from examining outcomes with RIC. And a lack of data at analysis prevented them from examining pre-HSCT and post-HSCT management of CML, the interval between diagnosis and HSCT, and the life-long economic burden of allo-HSCT.
However, she said data collection is ongoing, and the researchers hope to address some of these limitations.
*Information presented at the meeting differs from the abstract.