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Cytotoxic T‐lymphocyte therapy for post‐transplant lymphoproliferative disorder after solid organ transplantation in children
51
Citations
19
References
2018
Year
Solid Organ TransplantationImmunologyTransplantation MedicinePathologyCytotoxic T‐lymphocyte TherapyImmunotherapyThird-party Ebv-ctlBlood TransfusionHematologyGraft SurvivalCell TransplantationEbv-seropositive Third-party DonorsTransplantationMedicineImmune SurveillancePsot PatientsLiver TransplantationTransplant RejectionHepatologyPost‐transplant Lymphoproliferative DisorderOncologyGraft Rejection
EBV-CTL immunotherapy targets EBV antigens expressed by tumor cells in PTLD. Data on outcome of EBV-CTL in pSOT patients are limited. The aim of the study is to describe our experience with allogeneic, third-party EBV-CTL for the treatment of PTLD in pSOT patients in a single tertiary center. Retrospective review was performed of all pSOT patients who received EBV-CTL for PTLD. PTLD was diagnosed using World Health Organization histologic criteria. EBV-CTLs were derived from human leukocyte antigen-typed, EBV-seropositive third-party donors, and cryopreserved and maintained by an accredited national blood transfusion service. Ten patients received EBV-CTL for histologically proven PTLD from 1999 to 2016 following liver (n=5), combined intestinal/liver (n=4), and liver/kidney (n=1) transplantation. PTLD occurred at median age of 40 months (range: 12-144) and median post-transplant interval of 8 months (range: 2-107). Seven had monomorphic, two had polymorphic, and one had Hodgkin-type PTLD. All were of B-cell origin and EBV-positive on histology. EBV-CTL achieved an overall remission rate of 80% (8 of 10). Transient adverse effects included fever, tachycardia, and vomiting. None developed graft-versus-host disease or opportunistic infections. EBV-CTL is an effective treatment for PTLD in pSOT patients, with good remission rate and minimal toxicity.
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