Abstract
A prospective multicenter observational study of organ response was conducted in patients with chronic GVHD diagnosed by the NIH criteria. When response was assessed at 12months (12M) in 118 patients, 74.6% were classified as responders and 25.4% as non-responders. The skin and oral cavity were the most frequent organs used as the basis for determining overall response. The lungs, liver, and eyes were also used in 20% of patients. Non-response decisions at 12M were most frequent in the lungs. A significantly higher percentage of responders than non-responders completed systemic treatment (24.3% vs. 3.3%, P = 0.02). Global scoring showed significant changes, with improvement in responders and worsening in non-responders throughout the observation period. Two-year transplant-related mortality, using the 12M assessment as the landmark, was significantly worse in non-responders (28.5% vs. 2,7%, P = 0.0001), while the 2-year recurrence rate was equivalent (5.4% vs. 4.8%, P = 0.78). Consequently, the 2-year overall survival rate from the 12M assessment was significantly better in responders than non-responders (95% vs. 65.3%, P = 0.0001). Our data suggests that patients who do not achieve a response within the first year should be candidates for clinical studies on chronic GVHD.
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