Abstract

Post-transplantation cyclophosphamide (PTCy) has been highly successful at preventing severe acute and chronic graft-versus-host disease (GVHD) after allogeneic hematopoietic cell transplantation (HCT). The clinical application of this approach was based on extensive studies in major histocompatibility complex (MHC)-matched murine skin allografting models, in which cyclophosphamide was believed to act via three main mechanisms: (1) selective elimination of alloreactive T cells; (2) intrathymic clonal deletion of alloreactive T-cell precursors; and (3) induction of suppressor T cells. In these models, cyclophosphamide was only effective in very specific contexts, requiring particular cell dose, cell source, PTCy dose, and recipient age. Achievement of transient mixed chimerism also was required. Furthermore, these studies showed differences in the impact of cyclophosphamide on transplanted cells (tumor) versus tissue (skin grafts), including the ability of cyclophosphamide to prevent rejection of the former but not the latter after MHC-mismatched transplants. Yet, clinically PTCy has demonstrated efficacy in MHC-matched or partially-MHC-mismatched HCT across a wide array of patients and HCT platforms. Importantly, clinically significant acute GVHD occurs frequently after PTCy, inconsistent with alloreactive T-cell elimination, whereas PTCy is most active against severe acute GVHD and chronic GVHD. These differences between murine skin allografting and clinical HCT suggest that the above-mentioned mechanisms may not be responsible for GVHD prevention by PTCy. Indeed, recent work by our group in murine HCT has shown that PTCy does not eliminate alloreactive T cells nor is the thymus necessary for PTCy's efficacy. Instead, other mechanisms appear to be playing important roles, including: (1) reduction of alloreactive CD4+ effector T-cell proliferation; (2) induced functional impairment of surviving alloreactive CD4+ and CD8+ effector T cells; and (3) preferential recovery of CD4+ regulatory T cells. Herein, we review the history of cyclophosphamide's use in preventing murine skin allograft rejection and our evolving new understanding of the mechanisms underlying its efficacy in preventing GVHD after HCT. Efforts are ongoing to more fully refine and elaborate this proposed new working model. The completion of this effort will provide critical insight relevant for the rational design of novel approaches to improve outcomes for PTCy-treated patients and for the induction of tolerance in other clinical contexts.

Highlights

  • Hematopoietic cell transplantation (HCT) is the only potentially curative treatment for many patients with advanced hematologic malignancies or severe non-malignant diseases

  • The use of cyclophosphamide for inducing tolerance to skin allografting models had been thought to rest on three principles, with the primary mechanism being selective elimination of alloreactive T cells by post-transplantation cyclophosphamide (PTCy) [49, 53]

  • A preferential reduction of alloreactive T cells over time was shown in major histocompatibility complex (MHC)-matched skin allografting models, it was not shown in MHC-mismatched models

Read more

Summary

INTRODUCTION

Hematopoietic cell transplantation (HCT) is the only potentially curative treatment for many patients with advanced hematologic malignancies or severe non-malignant diseases. Clinical outcomes using PTCy have been quite promising; registry data suggest that PTCy reduces chronic GVHD incidence after HLA-haploidentical HCT, resulting in decreased GVHD rates but similar survival compared with patients undergoing standard HCT using HLAmatched related or unrelated donors [10,11,12,13]. It has been long believed that we understood these mechanisms based on extrapolation from major histocompatibility complex (MHC)-matched murine skin allografting models using cyclophosphamide [19, 20] These mechanisms have not fit with some of the clinical observations in human HCT (e.g., no substantial impact of PTCy on grade II acute GVHD), and recent data suggest that these mechanistic explanations may not be true in murine HCT models [21,22,23]. This review provides an overview of the history of cyclophosphamide’s use in preventing skin allografting rejection experimentally and of the evolving understanding regarding mechanisms of GVHD prevention by PTCy after HCT

EARLY STUDIES OF CYCLOPHOSPHAMIDE AS A TOLEROGENIC AGENT
POTENTIAL LIMITATIONS OF THIS MECHANISTIC MODEL
TOWARD A NEW UNDERSTANDING
IMMUNOLOGIC INSIGHTS FROM CLINICAL HCT
IMMUNOLOGIC INSIGHTS FROM CLINICAL SOLID ORGAN TRANSPLANTATION
DISCUSSION
Findings
Alloreactive T cells
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call