Abstract

Objective: To determine CMV reactivation in hematopoietic stem cell transplant patients with haploidentical versus fully HLA matched donors  Methodology: Retrospective Observational study was conducted at Armed Forces Bone Marrow Transplant Centre (AFBMTC) between March 2019 and October 2022. We enrolled a total of 60 consecutive patients.CMV DNA PCR analysis was carried out every week from day +14 to day +100 in order to monitor CMV reactivation during the 100-day post-transplantation period. The SaMag viral nucleic acid extraction kit (Sacace Biotechnologies, Como, Italy) was used to extract the DNA from two millilitres of blood collected in EDTA tubes. The kit's lower limit of detection for blood and serum was 5 copies/mL, while for other body fluids it was 500 copies/mL. An Applied Biosystems 7500 real-time PCR machine (Thermo Fisher Scientific, Waltham, MA) was used to conduct the PCR analysis. Result: The age range from 0.6 to 53 years ago was a median of 15±10.6. 39 patients had CMV reactivation (65%). With a range of 13 to 66 days, the median time to CMV DNAemia was 19.25 days.. Only two (3.3%) of the 39 patients received ganciclovir, while 26 (43.3%) received valganciclovir. Patients with aplastic anaemia had the highest rate of CMV infection (41%), followed by those with ALL (20.5%), AML (12.8%), and primary immunodeficiency (10.2%). A statistically significant connection between the underlying diagnosis and CMV infection. CMV infection was higher in haplo identical transplant recipients (66.6%) than in completely matched recipients (33.3%) and was statistically significantly. Sadly, 14 people passed away, yielding a mortality rate of 23.3%. Primary graft failure was the most frequent cause of mortality, resulting in neutropenic sepsis in 6 patients (42.85%), but 3 of these patients also had CMV reactivation. The rate of overall survival (OS) was found to be 76.7%. The rate of disease-free survival (DFS) was estimated at 71.7%. Notably, neither OS nor DFS in our analysis showed a statistically significant connection with CMV infection. Conclusion: The findings demonstrated a statistically significant association between haploidentical transplantation and CMV reactivation, with higher rates observed in the haploidentical group compared to fully matched recipients. Various factors, including underlying diagnosis, conditioning regimen, and GVHD prophylaxis, were also found to be correlated with CMV reactivation. However, while CMV reactivation was associated with specific factors, it did not impact overall survival or disease-free survival in the study population.

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