Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation as Treatment for Patients with DOCK8 Deficiency

  • Susanne E Aydin
  • Alexandra F Freeman
  • Waleed Al-Herz
  • Hamoud A Al-Mousa
  • Rand K Arnaout
  • Roland C Aydin
  • Vincent Barlogis
  • Bernd H Belohradsky
  • Carmem Bonfim
  • Robbert G Bredius
  • Julia I Chu
  • Oana C Ciocarlie
  • Figen Doğu
  • Hubert B Gaspar
  • Raif S Geha
  • Andrew R Gennery
  • Fabian Hauck
  • Abbas Hawwari
  • Dennis D Hickstein
  • Manfred Hoenig
  • Aydan Ikinciogullari
  • Christoph Klein
  • Ashish Kumar
  • Marianne R S Ifversen
  • Susanne Matthes
  • Ayse Metin
  • Benedicte Neven
  • Sung-Yun Pai
  • Suhag H Parikh
  • Capucine Picard
  • Ellen D Renner
  • Özden Sanal
  • Ansgar S Schulz
  • Friedhelm Schuster
  • Nirali N Shah
  • Evan B Shereck
  • Mary A Slatter
  • Helen C Su
  • Joris van Montfrans
  • Wilhelm Woessmann
  • John B Ziegler
  • Michael H Albert
  • Inborn Errors Working Party of the European Group for Blood and Marrow Transplantation and the European Society for Primary Immunodeficiencies

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Biallelic variations in the dedicator of cytokinesis 8 (DOCK8) gene cause a combined immunodeficiency with eczema, recurrent bacterial and viral infections, and malignancy. Natural disease outcome is dismal, but allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT) can cure the disease.

OBJECTIVE: To determine outcome of HSCT for DOCK8 deficiency and define possible outcome variables.

METHODS: We performed a retrospective study of the results of HSCT in a large international cohort of DOCK8-deficient patients.

RESULTS: We identified 81 patients from 22 centers transplanted at a median age of 9.7 years (range, 0.7-27.2 years) between 1995 and 2015. After median follow-up of 26 months (range, 3-135 months), 68 (84%) patients are alive. Severe acute (III-IV) or chronic graft versus host disease occurred in 11% and 10%, respectively. Causes of death were infections (n = 5), graft versus host disease (5), multiorgan failure (2), and preexistent lymphoma (1). Survival after matched related (n = 40) or unrelated (35) HSCT was 89% and 81%, respectively. Reduced-toxicity conditioning based on either treosulfan or reduced-dose busulfan resulted in superior survival compared with fully myeloablative busulfan-based regimens (97% vs 78%; P = .049). Ninety-six percent of patients younger than 8 years at HSCT survived, compared with 78% of those 8 years and older (P = .06). Of the 73 patients with chimerism data available, 65 (89%) had more than 90% donor T-cell chimerism at last follow-up. Not all disease manifestations responded equally well to HSCT: eczema, infections, and mollusca resolved quicker than food allergies or failure to thrive.

CONCLUSIONS: HSCT is curative in most DOCK8-deficient patients, confirming this approach as the treatment of choice. HSCT using a reduced-toxicity regimen may offer the best chance for survival.

Bibliografische Daten

OriginalspracheEnglisch
ISSN2213-2198
DOIs
StatusVeröffentlicht - 03.2019
PubMed 30391550