Relapse after allogeneic stem cell transplantation

AJ Barrett, M Battiwalla - Expert review of hematology, 2010 - Taylor & Francis
AJ Barrett, M Battiwalla
Expert review of hematology, 2010Taylor & Francis
Since allogeneic stem cell transplantation (SCT) represents an intensive curative treatment
for high-risk malignancies, its failure to prevent relapse leaves few options for successful
salvage treatment. While many patients have a high early mortality from relapse, some
respond and have sustained remissions, and a minority has a second chance of cure with
appropriate therapy. The prognosis for relapsed hematological malignancies after SCT
depends on four factors: the time elapsed from SCT to relapse (with relapses occurring …
Since allogeneic stem cell transplantation (SCT) represents an intensive curative treatment for high-risk malignancies, its failure to prevent relapse leaves few options for successful salvage treatment. While many patients have a high early mortality from relapse, some respond and have sustained remissions, and a minority has a second chance of cure with appropriate therapy. The prognosis for relapsed hematological malignancies after SCT depends on four factors: the time elapsed from SCT to relapse (with relapses occurring within 6 months having the worst prognosis), the disease type (with chronic leukemias and some lymphomas having a second possibility of cure with further treatment), the disease burden and site of relapse (with better treatment success if disease is treated early), and the conditions of the first transplant (with superior outcome for patients where there is an opportunity to increase either the alloimmune effect, the specificity of the antileukemia effect with targeted agents or the intensity of the conditioning in a second transplant). These features direct treatments toward either modified second transplants, chemotherapy, targeted antileukemia therapy, immunotherapy or palliative care.
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