Plerixafor alone for the mobilization and transplantation of HLA-matched sibling donor hematopoietic stem cells

Yi‐Bin Chen(Massachusetts General Hospital), Jennifer Le‐Rademacher(Medical College of Wisconsin), Ruta Brazauskas(Medical College of Wisconsin), Deidre M. Kiefer(National Marrow Donor Program), Mehdi Hamadani(Froedtert Hospital), John F. DiPersio(Barnes-Jewish Hospital), Mark R. Litzow(Mayo Clinic in Arizona), Michael Craig(West Virginia University Hospitals), Mitchell E. Horwitz(Duke Medical Center), Andrew Artz(University of Chicago Medical Center), Brian McClune(University of Minnesota Medical Center), Hugo F. Fernández(Moffitt Cancer Center), Hien K. Duong(Cleveland Clinic), Hati Kobusingye(National Marrow Donor Program), Mandi Proue(National Marrow Donor Program), Rebecca Drexler(National Marrow Donor Program), Mary M. Horowitz(Medical College of Wisconsin), Bronwen E. Shaw(Medical College of Wisconsin), J. Philip Miller(National Marrow Donor Program), Sakura Hosoba(Shiga University of Medical Science), Edmund K. Waller(Emory University), Steven M. Devine(National Marrow Donor Program)
Blood Advances
March 19, 2019
Cited by 39Open Access
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Abstract

Abstract Plerixafor, a direct antagonist of CXCR4/stromal-derived factor 1, can safely and rapidly mobilize allografts without the use of granulocyte colony-stimulating factor (G-CSF). We conducted a phase 2, multicenter, prospective study of plerixafor-mobilized HLA-identical sibling allografts for allogeneic hematopoietic cell transplantation in recipients with hematological malignancies. Donors (n = 64) were treated with subcutaneous plerixafor (240 µg/kg) and started leukapheresis (LP) 4 hours later. The primary objective was to determine the proportion of donors who were successfully mobilized: defined as collection of ≥2.0 × 106 CD34+ cells per kilogram recipient weight in ≤2 LP sessions. Recipients subsequently received reduced intensity (RIC; n = 33) or myeloablative (MAC; n = 30) conditioning. Sixty-three of 64 (98%) donors achieved the primary objective. The median CD34+ cell dose per kilogram recipient weight collected within 2 days was 4.7 (0.9-9.6). Plerixafor was well tolerated with only grade 1 or 2 drug-related adverse events noted. Bone pain was not observed. Plerixafor-mobilized grafts engrafted promptly. One-year progression-free and overall survivals were 53% (95% confidence interval [CI], 36% to 71%) and 63% (95% CI, 46% to 79%) for MAC and 64% (95% CI, 47% to 79%) and 70% (95% CI, 53% to 84%) for RIC recipients, respectively. Donor toxicity was reduced relative to G-CSF mobilized related donors. This is the first multicenter trial to demonstrate that, as an alternative to G-CSF, plerixafor rapidly and safely mobilizes sufficient numbers of CD34+ cells from matched sibling donors for HCT. Engraftment was prompt, and outcomes in recipients were encouraging. This trial was registered at clinicaltrials.gov as #NCT01696461.


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