Radiation-induced cavernous hemangioma (RICH) is a late complication of cerebral radiation therapy. Long-term survivors of hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT) who underwent radiation therapy could be at increased risk for RICH. We investigated records of 68 patients who underwent HSCT during childhood or adolescence and were assessed by magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), including T2*-weighted imaging of the brain, annually for 5 years over a range of 6 to 29 years after HSCT. We developed a scoring and grading system for RICH to monitor the process and the progress of radiologic changes. Among the 68 patients investigated, 28 (41.2%) were diagnosed with CH. All 28 patients had received total body irradiation as a conditioning treatment for HSCT and/or cranial radiation therapy before HSCT as part of the treatment of their primary disease. RICH was diagnosed in none of the patients who did not receive radiation (n = 19), in 46.2% of those who received 6 to 12 Gy (n = 39), and in all of those who received 18 to 36 Gy (n = 10). Total RICH scores were correlated with higher radiation doses. Careful and long-term evaluation with MRI, including T2*-weighted imaging, is necessary for HSCT recipients who received radiation therapy before and/or during HSCT.
A total of 216 patients with IEM were treated by allogeneic HSCT in Japan from 1985 until 2010. The results of UCBT have improved, and the OS rate of UCBT (81.9%) was not different from those of RBMT (87.2%) or UBMT (73.9%) in 2000-2010. However, EFS rates in RBMT (73.2%) and UBMT (62.2%) were better than that in UCBT (49.5%), and the difference between RBMT and UCBT was significant (p = 0.01). The EFS rate of patients conditioned by RIC (74.6%) was comparable or slightly better than in those who underwent MAC with irradiation (57.9%) or without irradiation (54.2%) in 2000-2010. A more pronounced trend was observed toward differential EFS for UCBT in 2000-2010: RIC (62.9%), MAC with irradiation (20.0%), and MAC without irradiation (42.1%). The difference between RIC and MAC with irradiation was significant (p < 0.03). In summary, we report a Japanese registry analysis of HSCT for IEM with improving survival in UCBT. The introduction of RIC after 2000 was considered to contribute to this improvement. UCBT could be recommended for those who lack an HLA-identical sibling donor.
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