High lymphocyte counts before antithymocyte globulin administration predict acute graft-versus-host disease

AbstractAntithymocyte globulin (ATG) reduces severe acute and chronic graft-versus-host disease (GVHD) in allogeneic peripheral blood stem cell transplantation (PBSCT). However, risk factors for severe acute GVHD in PBSCT using ATG remain to be determined. We conducted a single-center, retrospective study to analyze the association of acute GVHD requiring systemic corticosteroid (SC-aGVHD) with absolute lymphocyte counts (ALC) before the administration of ATG or conditioning in 53 patients with HLA-matched PBSCT using low-dose thymoglobulin (2 mg/kg) after myeloablative conditioning. The cumulative incidence of SC-aGVHD was 17.0% and ALC before ATG were significantly higher in patients with SC-aGVHD compared to that in patients without it (median, 0.15 × 109/L vs 0.06 × 109/L,P = 0.047). The cumulative incidence of SC-aGVHD was significantly higher in patients with high ALC before ATG ( ≥ 0.15 × 109/L) than in those with low ALC (38.5% vs 10.0%,P = 0.016). Non-relapse mortality (NRM) was also significantly higher in the high ALC before ATG group than the low ALC before ATG group (2-year NRM: 23.9% vs 6.0%,P = 0.048), leading to worse survival (2-year overall survival: 69.2% vs 83.5%,P = 0.039). Our study suggested that high ALC before ATG is a risk factor for SC-aGVHD.
Source: Annals of Hematology - Category: Hematology Source Type: research