Prior chemotherapy and allograft CD34+ dose impact donor engraftment following nonmyeloablative allogeneic stem cell transplantation in patients with solid tumors

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Abstract

Significant engraftment variability occurs among patients following nonmyeloablative hematopoietic cell transplantation. We analyzed the impact of multiple factors on donor myeloid and T-cell engraftment in 36 patients with metastatic tumors undergoing cyclophosphamide/fludarabine-based conditioning. Higher CD34+ doses facilitated donor myeloid engraftment, while prior chemotherapy exposure facilitated both donor myeloid and T-cell engraftment. At day 30, median donor T-cell and myeloid chimerism was 98% and 76%, respectively, in those patients with prior chemotherapy versus 88% (P = .008) and 26% (P < .0001) in chemotherapy-naive patients. Donor myeloid chimerism at day 45 was predicted by prior chemotherapy exposure and the log10 of the CD34+ dose (adjusted coefficient of determination [R2] = .47; P

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Carvallo, C., Geller, N., Kurlander, R., Srinivasan, R., Mena, O., Igarashi, T., … Childs, R. W. (2004). Prior chemotherapy and allograft CD34+ dose impact donor engraftment following nonmyeloablative allogeneic stem cell transplantation in patients with solid tumors. Blood, 103(4), 1560–1563. https://doi.org/10.1182/blood-2003-04-1170

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