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CD3/CD19 Depletion for T-cell Reduction of Allogeneic Transplants: Mostly Efficient, but not Robust

Aggressive T-cell depletion, in vitro or in vivo, is a prerequisite for survival of haplo-identical stem cell transplantation. The classical T-cell-depleted transplant, immunomagnetically enriched CD34+ cells, is very safe with respect to graft-versus-host reactivity, but associated with very high t...

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Autores principales: Wiercinska, Eliza, Seifried, Erhard, Bonig, Halvard
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Atlantis Press 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8486974/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34820615
http://dx.doi.org/10.2991/chi.k.210725.001
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author Wiercinska, Eliza
Seifried, Erhard
Bonig, Halvard
author_facet Wiercinska, Eliza
Seifried, Erhard
Bonig, Halvard
author_sort Wiercinska, Eliza
collection PubMed
description Aggressive T-cell depletion, in vitro or in vivo, is a prerequisite for survival of haplo-identical stem cell transplantation. The classical T-cell-depleted transplant, immunomagnetically enriched CD34+ cells, is very safe with respect to graft-versus-host reactivity, but associated with very high transplant-related and relapse mortality with an overall probability of survival of only 20%. Protocols for T- and B-cell depletion were therefore developed, reasoning that transplantation of the majority of Natural Killer (NK) cells and the substantial dose of residual T-cells might improve survival, which was, in principle, confirmed. Anecdotal reports of frequent failure to achieve adequate T-cell depletion prompted review of the aggregate data for transplant quality at our center. The first observation is the relative paucity of combined CD3/CD19 depletion processes as PTCy protocols have made inroads, 13 depletions in 8 years. Median T- and B-cell log-depletion were −3.89 and −1.92, respectively; instead of, CD34+ cell recovery was generally high (median 92%), as was NK-cell recovery (median 52%). However, the process failed to yield satisfactory T- and B-cell depletion in two out of 13 preparations, of which one product could be rescued by a second round of depletion, at the expense of CD34+ cell recovery. In our hands, the process is thus insufficiently robust for routine clinical use. Assuming similar observations in other centers, this may explain implementation of alternative protocols, such as TCRαβ/CD19 depletion or transplantation of unmanipulated grafts with subsequent in vivo depletion.
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spelling pubmed-84869742021-11-23 CD3/CD19 Depletion for T-cell Reduction of Allogeneic Transplants: Mostly Efficient, but not Robust Wiercinska, Eliza Seifried, Erhard Bonig, Halvard Clin Hematol Int Research Article Aggressive T-cell depletion, in vitro or in vivo, is a prerequisite for survival of haplo-identical stem cell transplantation. The classical T-cell-depleted transplant, immunomagnetically enriched CD34+ cells, is very safe with respect to graft-versus-host reactivity, but associated with very high transplant-related and relapse mortality with an overall probability of survival of only 20%. Protocols for T- and B-cell depletion were therefore developed, reasoning that transplantation of the majority of Natural Killer (NK) cells and the substantial dose of residual T-cells might improve survival, which was, in principle, confirmed. Anecdotal reports of frequent failure to achieve adequate T-cell depletion prompted review of the aggregate data for transplant quality at our center. The first observation is the relative paucity of combined CD3/CD19 depletion processes as PTCy protocols have made inroads, 13 depletions in 8 years. Median T- and B-cell log-depletion were −3.89 and −1.92, respectively; instead of, CD34+ cell recovery was generally high (median 92%), as was NK-cell recovery (median 52%). However, the process failed to yield satisfactory T- and B-cell depletion in two out of 13 preparations, of which one product could be rescued by a second round of depletion, at the expense of CD34+ cell recovery. In our hands, the process is thus insufficiently robust for routine clinical use. Assuming similar observations in other centers, this may explain implementation of alternative protocols, such as TCRαβ/CD19 depletion or transplantation of unmanipulated grafts with subsequent in vivo depletion. Atlantis Press 2021-08-02 /pmc/articles/PMC8486974/ /pubmed/34820615 http://dx.doi.org/10.2991/chi.k.210725.001 Text en © 2021 International Academy for Clinical Hematology. Publishing services by Atlantis Press International B.V. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/This is an open access article distributed under the CC BY-NC 4.0 license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/ (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/) ).
spellingShingle Research Article
Wiercinska, Eliza
Seifried, Erhard
Bonig, Halvard
CD3/CD19 Depletion for T-cell Reduction of Allogeneic Transplants: Mostly Efficient, but not Robust
title CD3/CD19 Depletion for T-cell Reduction of Allogeneic Transplants: Mostly Efficient, but not Robust
title_full CD3/CD19 Depletion for T-cell Reduction of Allogeneic Transplants: Mostly Efficient, but not Robust
title_fullStr CD3/CD19 Depletion for T-cell Reduction of Allogeneic Transplants: Mostly Efficient, but not Robust
title_full_unstemmed CD3/CD19 Depletion for T-cell Reduction of Allogeneic Transplants: Mostly Efficient, but not Robust
title_short CD3/CD19 Depletion for T-cell Reduction of Allogeneic Transplants: Mostly Efficient, but not Robust
title_sort cd3/cd19 depletion for t-cell reduction of allogeneic transplants: mostly efficient, but not robust
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8486974/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34820615
http://dx.doi.org/10.2991/chi.k.210725.001
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