Complement blockade for TA-TMA: lessons learned from large pediatric cohort treated with eculizumab
Author(s) -
Sonata Jodele,
Christopher E. Dandoy,
Adam Lane,
Benjamin L. Laskin,
Ashley TeusinkCross,
Kasiani C. Myers,
Gregory Wallace,
Adam Nelson,
Jack Bleesing,
Ranjit S. Chima,
Russel Hirsch,
Thomas D. Ryan,
Stefanie W. Benoit,
Kana Mizuno,
Mikako Warren,
Stella M. Davies
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
blood
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 5.515
H-Index - 465
eISSN - 1528-0020
pISSN - 0006-4971
DOI - 10.1182/blood.2019004218
Subject(s) - eculizumab , thrombotic microangiopathy , medicine , atypical hemolytic uremic syndrome , cohort , proteinuria , complement system , gastroenterology , retrospective cohort study , kidney , immunology , antibody , disease
Overactivated complement is a high-risk feature in HSCT recipients with transplant associated thrombotic microangiopathy (TA-TMA), and untreated patients have dismal outcomes. We present our experience of 64 pediatric HSCT recipients with high risk TA-TMA and multi-organ injury treated with the complement blocker eculizumab. We demonstrate significant improvement in 1y post-HSCT survival to 66% in treated patients from our previously reported untreated cohort with same high-risk TA-TMA features that had 1y post-HSCT survival of 16.7%. Responding patients benefited from a brief but intensive eculizumab therapy course using PK/PD guided dosing, requiring a median of 11 doses of eculizumab (IQR 7-20). Therapy was discontinued due to resolution of TA-TMA at a median of 66 days (IQR 41-110). Subjects with higher complement activation measured by elevated blood sC5b-9 at the start of therapy were less likely to respond to treatment (OR =0.15, p-value 0.0014), and required more doses of eculizumab [r = 0.43, p-value = 0.0004]. Patients with intestinal bleeding had the fastest eculizumab clearance, required the highest number of eculizumab doses (20 vs 9, p=0.0015), and had lower 1y survival (44% vs 78%, p=0.01). Over 70% of survivors had proteinuria on long term follow up. The best GFR recovery in survivors was a median 20% lower (IQR 7.3-40.3%) than their pre-HSCT GFR. In summary, complement blockade with eculizumab is an effective therapeutic strategy for high risk TA-TMA, but some patients with severe disease lack a complete response, prompting us to propose early intervention strategies and search for additional targetable endothelial injury pathways.
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