James Slack, on behalf of the, Michael H. Albert, Dmitry Balashov, Bernd H. Belohradsky, Alice Bertaina, Jack Bleesing, Claire Booth, Jochen Buechner, Rebecca H. Buckley, Marie Ouachée-Chardin, Elena Deripapa, Katarzyna Drabko, Mary Eapen, Tobias Feuchtinger, Andrea Finocchi, H. Bobby Gaspar, Sujal Ghosh, Alfred Gillio, Luis I. Gonzalez-Granado, Eyal Grunebaum, Tayfun Güngör, Carsten Heilmann, Merja Helminen, Kohei Higuchi, Kohsuke Imai, Krzysztof Kalwak, Nubuo Kanazawa, Gülsün Karasu, Zeynep Y. Kucuk, Alexandra Laberko, Andrzej Lange, Nizar Mahlaoui, Roland Meisel, D. Moshous, Hideki Muramatsu, Suhag Parikh, Srdjan Pasic, Irene Schmid, Catharina Schuetz, Ansgar Schulz, Kirk R. Schultz, Peter J. Shaw, Mary A. Slatter, Karl-Walter Sykora, Shinobu Tamura, Mervi Taskinen, Angela Wawer, Beata Wolska-Kuśnierz, Morton J. Cowan, Alain Fischer, Andrew R. Gennery Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology 141 (1) 322 -328.e10 2018年01月01日
[査読無し][通常論文] Background Rare DNA breakage repair disorders predispose to infection and lymphoreticular malignancies. Hematopoietic cell transplantation (HCT) is curative, but coadministered chemotherapy or radiotherapy is damaging because of systemic radiosensitivity. We collected HCT outcome data for Nijmegen breakage syndrome, DNA ligase IV deficiency, Cernunnos–XRCC4-like factor (Cernunnos-XLF) deficiency, and ataxia-telangiectasia (AT). Methods Data from 38 centers worldwide, including indication, donor, conditioning regimen, graft-versus-host disease, and outcome, were analyzed. Conditioning was classified as myeloablative conditioning (MAC) if it contained radiotherapy or alkylators and reduced-intensity conditioning (RIC) if no alkylators and/or 150 mg/m2 fludarabine or less and 40 mg/kg cyclophosphamide or less were used. Results Fifty-five new, 14 updated, and 18 previously published patients were analyzed. Median age at HCT was 48 months (range, 1.5-552 months). Twenty-nine patients underwent transplantation for infection, 21 had malignancy, 13 had bone marrow failure, 13 received pre-emptive transplantation, 5 had multiple indications, and 6 had no information. Twenty-two received MAC, 59 received RIC, and 4 were infused
information was unavailable for 2 patients. Seventy-three of 77 patients with DNA ligase IV deficiency, Cernunnos-XLF deficiency, or Nijmegen breakage syndrome received conditioning. Survival was 53 (69%) of 77 and was worse for those receiving MAC than for those receiving RIC (P =.006). Most deaths occurred early after transplantation, suggesting poor tolerance of conditioning. Survival in patients with AT was 25%. Forty-one (49%) of 83 patients experienced acute GvHD, which was less frequent in those receiving RIC compared with those receiving MAC (26/56 [46%] vs 12/21 [57%], P =.45). Median follow-up was 35 months (range, 2-168 months). No secondary malignancies were reported during 15 years of follow-up. Growth and developmental delay remained after HCT
immune-mediated complications resolved. Conclusion RIC HCT resolves DNA repair disorder–associated immunodeficiency. Long-term follow-up is required for secondary malignancy surveillance. Routine HCT for AT is not recommended.