Richard Champlin is a professor and chair of the Department of Stem Cell Transplantation and Cellular Therapy at MD Anderson Cancer Center. He has over 30 years of experience in hematopoietic stem cell transplantation research. In this presentation, he discusses the pros and cons of different stem cell donor sources for transplantation including matched sibling, matched unrelated donor, cord blood, and haploidentical related donors. While matched siblings remain the preferred donor source, innovative strategies are improving outcomes with alternative donor sources like cord blood and haploidentical transplants. Prospective studies are still needed to directly compare outcomes between donor modalities.
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Donor Selection: Unrealted donor transplant. Prof. Richard Champlin
1. RICHARD CHAMPLIN, MD
Houston, USA
• Professor and Chair of the Department of Stem Cell
Transplantation and Cellular Therapy at the University of
Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center
• Dr. Richard Champlin has over 30 years of experience in
clinical and translational research involving hematopoietic
stem cell transplantation. He has been the President of the
American Society of Blood and Marrow Transplantation as
well as the Center for International Center for Blood and
Marrow Transplantation Research. He was also the board
Member of the National Marrow Donor Program and is a
current member of the HRSA Advisory Committee for Cord
and Stem Cell Transplantation at the MD Anderson Cancer
Center. Professor Champlin chairs the Working Committee
on Alternative Donors and Cell Sources of the International
Bone Marrow Transplant Registry.
5. Pros and Cons
• Matched unrelated donor-
– Pros:
• Results ~= matched sib (GVHD higher)
• Large system of registries, can find high res 8 of 8 match for > 50%,
– Chances depend on ethnic origin of patients
• Gold Standard- Established successful approach for
patients without a matched sibling donor
– Cons:
• Time search to transplant 2-4 months, too long for urgent patients
• 8 of 8 match in only about half, lower if minority race/ethnic origin
• Donor unavailability (at least 35%)
• Need to carefully coordinate collection and transplant, locked in to dates,
• Uncertain donor availability for second transplants, DLI
• Hard to coordinate with chemo for patients with relapsed disease
• $$ for search, collection, care
8. Pros and Cons
• Cord Blood
– Pros:
• Immunologically immature- less prone to produce
GVHD
• Less risk of transmitting infection
• Immunologically naïve- no preexisting immunity
• Can successfully transplant across HLA mismatch
• Can identify 5 of 6 or 4 of 6 match for most patients
• Has potent GVL effect, ?better than BM
• Cells already collected, shorter time search to
transplant
• Results improving, = MUD in some studies
• Low rate of chronic GVHD
9. Pros and Cons
• Cord Blood
– Cons:
• Low cell dose, slow recovery hematopoiesis and
immunity,
• Survival depends on cell dose- double cord required for
most adults
• GVHD major problem (with 4 of 6 or 5 of 6 matched Tx)
• Relatively high TRM
• Can’t go back to the donor for more cells or DLI (?CLI)
• Resource intensive – Progress shortening time to
engraftment
– $$$ for cord(s) transplant care
• Need system of banks, cost for collection, QA, storage
11. Pros and Cons
• Haploidentical related
– Pros:
• Most patients have a haplo match (parent, child,
half of siblings)
• Donor immediately available to transplant center,
allows close coordination with chemotherapy
• Don’t need a registry/ banks
– Major Progress
• T-cell depletion, particularly successful in children
– Depletion of alpha/beta T-cells, addition of Tregs
• T-cell replete
• Post transplant cyclophosphamide, tacrolimus, MMF
– Low rate of acute and chronic GVHD
12. Pros and Cons
• Haploidentical related
– Cons
• Ultimate challenge- most alloreactive transplant
• Historically, high rate rejection/GVHD/TRM
• T-cell depletion- slow immune recovery,
variable results, poorer results in adults
• Studies with post transplant cyclophosphamide-
short follow up, question if GVL will be reduced
17. Conclusions
• Matched sibling preferred donor
• Matched unrelated donor- more GVHD, but similar
results for most diagnoses- current gold standard for
those without matched sib
• Cord Blood- results similar to MUD in some studies,
slower recovery, being addressed with ex vivo
expansion technology, greater GVL suggested in some
studies
• Haploidentical- improved results with post transplant
Cy, similar results to MUD in preliminary studies
• Prospective studies needed to compare modalities
• Ultimately each cells source likely to have a role, and
further research is needed to improve each modality
18. Which Cell Source Will Win?
• I don’t know.
• Innovative strategies to improve outcomes are
needed with all cell sources- premature to pick
a winner.
– Cord Blood: ? Advantage for GVL; problem is
GVHD, immune reconstitution
– Haplo- Good control of GVHD; post transplant Cy
likely to impair GVL; major problem may be relapse
• BMT CTN randomized study to directly
compare double cord blood vs. haplo
• BMT CTN proposed study to compare haplo vs.
MUD- hypothesize shorter time to transplant
would favor haploidentical transplant
Notas do Editor
Adjusted probability of TRM in adult AML patients by donor type.