Abstract
Availability of suitably HLA-matched adult donors is a major barrier to allogeneic transplantation. Cord blood (CB) extends transplant access to many patients including minorities. However, some patients have no suitable unrelated donors (URDs) or CB grafts. Moreover, HLA-match is a critical determinant of URD & CB transplantation (CBT) outcome, & some patients will only have access to mismatched URDs &/or highly HLA-mismatched CB units. We evaluated if URD/ CB access has improved with increased size of URD registries & global CB inventories.
We prospectively collected ancestry data on patients undergoing searches between 10/2005-6/2013, & analyzed the availability of 9-10/10 HLA-matched URDs or 4-6/6 HLA-A,-B antigen, -DRB1 allele matched CB units by recipient ancestry in patients with hematologic malignancies. 10 HLA-allele matched URDs were given priority if available; otherwise HLA-mismatched URDs or double-unit CB grafts were chosen. Given our minimum CB total nucleated cell (TNC) dose criteria was increased from 1.5 to 2.0 x 107/kg/unit in 2010, this analysis was restricted to units with a cryo. TNC dose ≥ 2.0. Also, as high-resolution typing was performed in all CB units & considered in unit selection since 2012, availability of CB units by 10-allele match was evaluated. Finally, given the global public CB inventory reached 500,000 units in 2011, URD/CB availability was compared between early (10/2005-12/2010) & recent (1/2011-6/2013) periods.
708 patients were evaluated including 223 (31%) of non-European origins. 511 (72%) patients received an URD transplant, 159 (22%) received a CBT, & 38 (5%) had no graft. URD recipients were predominantly of European ancestry (n = 400, 78%) whereas only 77 (48%) of CBT recipients had European origins. 30/38 (79%) patients without any graft were non-European with over half (n = 20) being of African ancestry. “No graft” patients had a higher weight (median 93 kg, range 50-151) than CBT recipients (median 68 kg, range 8-133), p < 0.001. The availability of grafts for Europeans & non-Europeans during the early versus recent time periods is shown (Table). Patient ancestry distribution was equal during the periods. The majority of Europeans received a 10/10 URD transplant in both periods & very few had no graft (< 1% recently). However, only approximately half of non-Europeans undergoing URD transplant received a 10/10 match. Moreover, of non-Europeans overall, only 29/129 (22%) had a 10/10 URD in the early period, & this has not improved recently [28/94 (30%), p = 0.28]. The percentage of non-Europeans receiving CB units with a ≥ 5/6 donor-recipient HLA-match has not improved (data not shown). However, while only 28% of non-Europeans received a CB graft consisting of ≥ 6/10 HLA-matched units in the early period, this donor-recipient HLA-match rate improved to 69% recently (p < 0.001), a rate similar to that of European patients. The percentage of non-Europeans with no graft has decreased from 17% to 8.5% (p = 0.08). Furthermore, while African patients were the largest group among no graft patients (68% in early period & 63% recently), of African patients without an URD, 16/31 (52%) had a CB graft in the early period versus 15/20 (75%) recently, p = 0.14.
N in Early Time Period . | N in Recent Time Period . |
---|---|
(n = 424, 60% of total patients) . | (n = 284, 40% of total patients) . |
Europeans (n = 485) | |
N = 295 | N = 190 |
URD: 246 [175/246 (71%) received 10/10] | URD: 154 [117/154 (76%) received 10/10] |
CB: 42 [20/42 (48%) ≥ 6/10] | CB: 35 [19/35 (54%) ≥ 6/10] |
No graft: 7 [7/295 (2%) of Europeans] | No graft: 1 [1/190 (0.5%) of Europeans] |
Non-Europeans (n = 223) | |
N = 129 | N = 94 |
URD: 61 [29/61 (48%) 10/10] | URD: 50 [28/50 (56%) 10/10] |
CB: 46 [13/46 (28%) ≥ 6/10] | CB: 36 [25/36 (69%) ≥ 6/10] |
No graft: 22 [22/129 (17%) non-Europeans] | No graft: 8 [8/94 (8.5%) of non-Europeans] |
N in Early Time Period . | N in Recent Time Period . |
---|---|
(n = 424, 60% of total patients) . | (n = 284, 40% of total patients) . |
Europeans (n = 485) | |
N = 295 | N = 190 |
URD: 246 [175/246 (71%) received 10/10] | URD: 154 [117/154 (76%) received 10/10] |
CB: 42 [20/42 (48%) ≥ 6/10] | CB: 35 [19/35 (54%) ≥ 6/10] |
No graft: 7 [7/295 (2%) of Europeans] | No graft: 1 [1/190 (0.5%) of Europeans] |
Non-Europeans (n = 223) | |
N = 129 | N = 94 |
URD: 61 [29/61 (48%) 10/10] | URD: 50 [28/50 (56%) 10/10] |
CB: 46 [13/46 (28%) ≥ 6/10] | CB: 36 [25/36 (69%) ≥ 6/10] |
No graft: 22 [22/129 (17%) non-Europeans] | No graft: 8 [8/94 (8.5%) of non-Europeans] |
Very few Europeans do not have an URD &/or CB graft. However, URDs are a poor donor source for patients with non-European ancestry. By contrast, CB is a critically important stem cell source for minorities, & transplantation of units with higher rates of 10 HLA-allele match is now frequently possible likely due to a bigger inventory & the use of high-resolution matching. Our analysis suggests CB availability in non-Europeans has improved. However, additional measures are required to extend graft access for African ancestry patients.
No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.
Author notes
Asterisk with author names denotes non-ASH members.
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