Diane Krause, MD, PhD, and Mary Laughlin, MD
2010-04-27
Drs. Krause and Laughlin indicated no
relevant conflicts of interest.
Delaney C, Heimfeld S, Brashem-Stein C, et al. Notch-mediated
expansion of human cord blood progenitor cells capable of rapid myeloid
reconstitution. Nat Med. 2010;16:232-36.
Cord blood
transplantation has been limited for adults in part because engraftment is
significantly delayed compared to bone marrow or peripheral blood stem cells
(PBSCs). Times to reach an absolute neutrophil count (ANC) of 500/μL and to
become independent of platelet transfusions with a platelet count of at least
20,000/μL generally are within 10 to 14 days when PBSCs are transplanted, but
times increase to 27 days for ANC and 60 days for platelets in adults receiving
transplantation with a single cord blood unit (with the minimum nucleated cell
dose of 1x107/kg recipient weight).1 When two cord blood units are
administered, the times to engraftment are 23 and 62 days, on average.2
This
paper reports the results of a clinical trial from Irwin Bernstein’s group at
the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center in which patients received two cord
blood units, one unmanipulated and the other expanded in vitro prior to
transplantation. For the ex vivo expansion of hematopoietic progenitor
cells, they used an approach previously developed in the Bernstein laboratory3
in which thawed cord blood cells were stimulated for 16 days with delta-like 1,
a ligand for notch receptors. Previous studies showed that stimulation of the
notch signaling pathway promotes expansion of hematopoietic stem/progenitor
cells. Ex vivo stimulation led to a 160-fold increase in the number of
CD34+ cells derived from the thawed cord blood unit, and these human CD34+
cells were able to engraft the hematopoietic system of immunodeficient mice for
months.
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| Click image to enlarge |
The paper describes the
preclinical validations as well as preliminary results from 10 patients
(ranging from 3-43 years old and 16-79 kg in weight) in an ongoing phase I
clinical trial. All patients had high-risk leukemias that were in morphologic
remission at the time of transplant. Cord blood units were at least a four of
six HLA match with the recipient and three of six match with one another. The
average infused CD34-cell dose from the expanded cord blood unit was 6 x 106
CD34+ cells/kg, while that from the unmanipulated unit was 0.24 x 106/kg.
Safety was the primary objective of the trial, and there were no apparent
adverse events reported. One of the 10 patients experienced primary graft
rejection. The nine other patients on the trial showed a median time to ANC
engraftment of 16 (range 7-34) days. There are no data yet available on the
time to platelet engraftment. As depicted in the figure, the investigators
found that nearly all of the early ANC engraftment was derived from the
expanded unit, while in all but one patient the longer-term engraftment (beyond
20 days) was predominantly from the unmanipulated cord blood unit. Even though
engraftment from the expanded unit was transient, engraftment overall and from the
non-expanded unit was accelerated compared to patients who received two
unexpanded units. Those patients with later engraftment (20-30 days) showed no
engraftment from the expanded unit.
Ex vivo
expansion of hematopoietic stem cells, which by definition are
cells that are capable of long-term multi-lineage hematopoietic reconstitution
in a myeloablated host, remains a Holy Grail of hematology research. However,
in this study, Delaney and colleagues have successfully expanded hematopoietic
progenitor cells to provide short-term multi-lineage reconstitution of
myeloablated individuals. This provided a clinically important function in
patients undergoing cord blood transplantation by producing much needed
leukocytes prior to engraftment of long-term hematopoietic stem cells.
- Laughlin MJ, Eapen M,
Rubinstein P, et al. Outcomes
after transplantation of cord blood or bone marrow from unrelated donors in
adults with leukemia. N Engl J Med. 2004;351:2265-75.
- Barker JN, Weisdorf DJ,
DeFor TE, et al. Transplantation
of two partially HLA-matched umbilical cord blood units to enhance engraftment
in adults with hematologic malignancy. Blood. 2005;105:1343-47.
- Varnum-Finney B,
Brashem-Stein C, Bernstein ID. Combined
effects of Notch signaling and cytokines induce a multiple log increase in precursors
with lymphoid and myeloid reconstituting ability. Blood.
2003;101:1784-89.
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