Background: We report our updated experience of allogeneic transplantation in lympho-proliferative disorders using a reduced-intensity conditioning regimen combining BEAM (plus fludarabine in three cases) with pre-transplant CAMPATH. Post-transplant donor lymphocytes have been infused for persisting disease or relapse, and both chimerism and minimal residual disease have been monitored utilizing molecular techniques.
Methods: Thirty patients with median age 47.6 years underwent allogeneic transplantation for relapsed or high-risk lymphoproliferative disease using HLA-identical (sibling n = 25, unrelated n = 2) or one antigen mismatched sibling donors (n = 3). Twenty-one had NHL, three had HD and six had CLL/PLL. Stem-cell source was PBSC (n = 24), BM (n = 5) or both (n = 1) with a median CD34 dose of 4.5 x 10(6)/kg. GvHD prophylaxis was with CYA and MTX.
Results: Engraftment was prompt in the majority of patients, with a median of 15 days to both ANC > 0.5 and platelets > 20. There have been three transplant-related deaths secondary to viral pneumonitis or bacterial pneumonia. Seven patients developed Grade I-II acute GvHD post-transplant. Of 28 evaluable patients, 18 achieved a CR at assessment 2-3 months post-transplant and a further patient converted from PR to CR following DLI, to give an overall CR rate of 68%. Three patients had early progressive disease and six have relapsed from CR or progressed from PR (two of whom have achieved CR following DLI therapy). Overall survival is 67% and event-free survival 48% at 3 years. With a median follow-up of 1.3 years 57% of patients are currently alive and lymphoma-free. A molecular remission has been achieved in nine of 12 informative patients.
Discussion: These encouraging results show that this reduced-intensity conditioning regimen is effective, with a low-toxicity profile compared with conventional TBI-based conditioning, and certainly merits further evaluation in this setting.