Impact of marrow unrelated donor search duration on outcome of children with acute lymphoblastic leukemia in second remission.

Journal: Bone Marrow Transplantation
Published:
Abstract

We analyzed the outcome of 167 consecutive children with second CR acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL), for whom an unrelated donor (UD) search was activated between 1989 and 1998 at a median time of 2 months after relapse. A suitable donor was identified for 70 patients at 1 year and 6.5 months before and after 1995 from search activation, respectively; a further leukemia relapse occurred during the search in 94 children at a median of 4 months after search activation, 36 of whom underwent UD (14) or other types of transplant (22), beyond second CR, while 58 died of progressive disease. Of 73 patients not experiencing a second relapse, 64 underwent UD (46) or other types of transplant (18), while nine proceeded with chemotherapy, and only four of them survived. The 3-year disease-free survival (DFS) from second CR for the 167 patients is 15.1%, whereas 3-year DFS after transplant for the 60 UD and 40 alternative donor transplanted children is 31.6 and 25.4%, respectively. In conclusion, a further relapse is the main factor adversely affecting outcome of children with second CR ALL. Thus, for these patients, the search should be activated early after relapse and either a UD or an alternative transplant should be performed as early as possible.

Authors
G Dini, M Valsecchi, C Micalizzi, A Busca, A Balduzzi, W Arcese, S Cesaro, A Prete, M Rabusin, E Mazzolari, P Di Bartolomeo, N Sacchi, A Pession, G Giorgiani, E Lanino, T Lamparelli, C Favre, A Bosi, C Manzitti, S Galimberti, F Locatelli