International Recommendations for Screening and Preventative Practices for Long-Term Survivors of Transplantation and Cellular Therapy: A 2023 Update

Seth J. Rotz(Cleveland Clinic), Neel S. Bhatt(Fred Hutch Cancer Center), Betty K. Hamilton(Cleveland Clinic), Christine Duncan(Harvard University), Mahmoud Aljurf(King Faisal Specialist Hospital & Research Centre), Yoshiko Atsuta(Aichi Medical University), Kristen Beebe(Phoenix Children's Hospital), David Buchbinder(Children's Hospital of Orange County), Peggy Burkhard(National Marrow Donor Program), Paul A. Carpenter(Fred Hutch Cancer Center), Naeem Chaudhri(King Faisal Specialist Hospital & Research Centre), Mohamed Elemary(University of Saskatchewan), Mahmoud Elsawy(Dalhousie University), Gregory M.T. Guilcher(University of Calgary), Nada Hamad(The University of Sydney), Amado Karduss(Instituto de Cancerología Las Américas), Zinaida Perić(University Hospital Centre Zagreb), Duncan Purtill(Fiona Stanley Hospital), Douglas Rizzo(Medical College of Wisconsin), Morgani Rodrigues(Hospital Israelita Albert Einstein), Maria Belén Rosales Ostriz, Nina Salooja(Imperial College London), Hélène Schoemans(KU Leuven), Adriana Seber(Hospital Samaritano de São Paulo), Akshay Sharma(St. Jude Children's Research Hospital), Alok Srivastava(Christian Medical College, Vellore), Susan K. Stewart(Sarah Cannon), K. Scott Baker(Fred Hutch Cancer Center), Navneet S. Majhail(Sarah Cannon), Rachel Phelan(Medical College of Wisconsin)
Transplantation and Cellular Therapy
February 26, 2024
Cited by 60Open Access
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Abstract

As hematopoietic cell transplantation (HCT) and cellular therapy expand to new indications and international access improves, the number of HCTs performed annually continues to rise. Parallel improvements in HCT techniques and supportive care entails more patients surviving long term, creating further emphasis on survivorship needs. Survivors are at risk for developing late complications secondary to pretransplantation, peritransplantation, and post-transplantation exposures and other underlying risk factors. Guidelines for screening and preventive practices for HCT survivors were originally published in 2006 and then updated in 2012. An international group of experts was convened to review the contemporary literature and update the recommendations while considering the changing practices of HCT and cellular therapy. This review provides updated pediatric and adult survivorship guidelines for HCT and cellular therapy. The contributory role of chronic graft-versus-host disease (cGVHD) to the development of late effects is discussed, but cGVHD management is not covered in detail. These guidelines emphasize the special needs of patients with distinct underlying HCT indications or comorbidities (eg, hemoglobinopathies, older adults) but do not replace more detailed group-, disease-, or condition-specific guidelines. Although these recommendations should be applicable to the vast majority of HCT recipients, resource constraints may limit their implementation in some settings.


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