Abstract 4655Umbilical cord blood from unrelated donors has been successfully used as an alternative hematopoietic stem cell source to treat hematologic malignancies in patients lacking HLA-matched donors. However, umbilical cord blood transplantation (UCBT) is associated with a higher risk of engraftment failure and more delayed immunological recovery than bone marrow transplantation and peripheral blood stem cell transplantation (PBSCT). Recently, human herpesvirus-6 (HHV-6) has been recognized as an important pathogen in allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT). In particular, HHV-6 reactivation often causes limbic encephalitis with a dismal prognosis. We conducted a prospective, multicenter study to assess the safety and efficacy of preemptive therapy with foscarnet sodium (PFA) to prevent HHV-6 encephalitis after HSCT. Materials and methodsEligible patients were aged from 16 to 75 years with hematologic disorders refractory to conventional therapy and considered to require UCBT or HLA 1-haplotype mismatched HSCT (haplo HSCT) due to the unavailability of an HLA-identical relatives or a suitable unrelated donor. Informed consent was obtained from all subjects according to the Declaration of Helsinki, and this study protocol was approved by the institutional ethical committee. The amount of plasma HHV-6 DNA was measured 3 times per week between day 7 and day 36 after UCBT or PBSCT from HLA-haploidentical relative donors. PFA, 90 mg/kg/day, was given when the amount of HHV-6 DNA exceeded 5 ×102 copies/ml. ResultsOf 20 cases registered between September 2007 and January 2009, 12 of 15 UCBT recipients (80%) became positive for HHV-6 DNAemia, and 7 cases exceeded 5×102 copies/ml, while none of the 5 patients who received haplo HSCT became positive (UCBT vs. haplo HSCT; p<0.004). HHV-6 reactivation occurred earlier in patients who eventually required PFA due to an increase in the HHV-6 DNA copy number greater than 5×102 copies/ml than in patients who did not require PFA treatment (median date of developing HHV-6 DNAemia, day 17 vs. day 22 after HSCT, p<0.02). PFA was given to 7 patients whose HHV-6 DNA copy number exceeded 5×102 copies/ml on day 15 to day 20 (median, day 17) after UCBT. The amount of HHV-6 DNA in the plasma decreased the day after PFA administration in 4 of 7 patients, while the other 3 patients required 3-4 days until the copy number decreased. Two patients showed an increase in HHV-6 DNA copy number greater than 1×104 /ml prior to the initiation of PFA without accompanying symptoms suggestive of encephalitis. One patient developed limbic encephalitis with mild symptoms just after initial PFA administration, but the encephalitis resolved without any neurologic sequelae. Mild and transient adverse effects were associated with PFA in only 2 of 8 patients. ConclusionPFA administration guided by the HHV-6 copy number in the early posttransplant period is safe and may reduce the risk of severe limbic encephalitis. Disclosures:Nakao:Alexion: Research Funding.
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