Jagriti Innovations developed a collaboration tool in partnership with the Cure2Children Foundation that has been used by health professionals in Italy, Pakistan, and India for the collaborative management of patients undergoing bone marrow transplantation (BMT) for thalassemia major since August 2008. This online open-access database covers data recording, analyzing, and reporting besides enabling knowledge exchange, telemedicine, capacity building, and quality assurance. As of February 2014, over 2400 patients have been registered and 112 BMTs have been performed with outcomes comparable to international standards, but at a fraction of the cost. This approach avoids medical emigration and contributes to local healthcare strengthening and competitiveness. This paper presents the experience and clinical outcomes associated with the use of this platform built using open-source tools and focusing on a locally pertinent tertiary care procedure—BMT.
Zinc (Zn) is essential for appropriate growth and proper immune function, both of which may be impaired in thalassemia children. Factors that can affect serum Zn levels in these patients may be related to their disease or treatment or nutritional causes. We assessed the serum Zn levels of children with thalassemia paired with a sibling. Zn levels were obtained from 30 children in Islamabad, Pakistan. Serum Zn levels and anthropometric data measures were compared among siblings. Thalassemia patients' median age was 4.5 years (range 1–10.6 years) and siblings was 7.8 years (range 1.1–17 years). The median serum Zn levels for both groups were within normal range: 100 μg/dL (10 μg/dL–297 μg/dL) for patients and 92 μg/dL (13 μg/dL–212 μg/dL) for siblings. There was no significant difference between the two groups. Patients' serum Zn values correlated positively with their corresponding siblings (r = 0.635, P < 0.001). There were no correlations between patients' Zn levels, height for age Z-scores, serum ferritin levels, chelation, or blood counts (including both total leukocyte and absolute lymphocyte counts). Patients' serum Zn values correlated with their siblings' values. In this study, patients with thalassemia do not seem to have disease-related Zn deficiency.
Key Points• In low-risk BMT for thalassemia, ATGBuCy seems as effective as Tt-BuCy in the prevention of rejection and may decrease transplant-related mortality. received ATG-BuCy. All patients were ,15 years and had no hepatomegaly (liver #2 cm from costal margin). Actuarial overall survival in the Tt-BuCy and ATG-BuCy groups was 87% and 94% and thalassemia-free survival was 80% and 85% at a median follow-up of 37 and 17 months, respectively, with no significant differences by log-rank statistics. SubstitutingTt with ATG in the standard BuCy context seems safe and effective and may decrease transplant-related mortality. Higher fertility rates are expected for patients who received ATG-BuCy.
Severe blood disorders and cancer are the leading cause of death and disability from noncommunicable diseases in the global pediatric population and a major financial burden. The most frequent of these conditions, namely sickle cell disease and severe thalassemia, are highly curable by blood or bone marrow transplantation (BMT) which can restore a normal health-related quality of life and be cost-effective. This position paper summarizes critical issues in extending global access to BMT based on ground experience in the start-up of several BMT units in middle-income countries (MICs) across South-East Asia and the Middle East where close to 700 allogeneic BMTs have been performed over a 10-year period. Basic requirements in terms of support systems, equipment, and consumables are summarized keeping in mind WHO’s model essential lists and recommendations. BMT unit setup and maintenance costs are summarized as well as those per transplant. Low-risk BMT is feasible and safe in MICs with outcomes comparable to high-income countries but at a fraction of the cost. This report might be of assistance to health care institutions in MICs interested in developing hematopoietic stem cell transplantation services and strengthening context appropriate tertiary care and higher medical education.
Severe thalassemia syndromes (ST) are highly curable by bone marrow transplant (BMT), but rejection may still occur. We retrospectively analyzed our fully matched related donor transplants to establish if isolated splenomegaly is an independent risk factor for rejection and if this risk can be reduced by modifying the conditioning protocol. In this study, we compared rejection rates between patients with and without splenomegaly in 189 consecutive low-risk ST transplants across 2 sequential conditioning regimens: regimen A (August 2013 to December 2016): busulfan (14 mg/kg oral, not adjusted to serum levels), cyclophosphamide (200 mg/kg), and anti-thymocyte globulin (ATG) (Genzyme (Sanofi, Paris, France) 4 mg/kg or Fresenius (Grafalon, Neovii Biotech GmbH, Gr€ afelfing Germany) 16 mg/kg on days À12 to À10), and regimen B: same backbone as regimen A except fludarabine total dose of 150 mg was added upfront and ATG dose was increased to 7 mg/kg in case of splenomegaly and/or sex-mismatched transplants (January 2017 to September 2018). Compared with regimen A, in regimen B, both overall rejection rates (RRs) (16% versus 6.5%, P = .023) and treatment-related mortality (TRM) (9.9% versus 2.8%, P = .038) improved significantly. By Cox regression analysis, the improvement in RR between the 2 protocols was particularly significant in patients with splenomegaly (RR 54.5% versus 6.5%, P = .00015; TRM 18.2% versus 6.5%, P = .25) (hazard ratio, 4.13; confidence interval, 1.61 to 10.6; P = .003). The increased risk of rejection related to splenomegaly can be overcome by adding fludarabine to the standard ATG-Busulfan-Cyclophosphamide (ATG-Bu-Cy) protocol without significantly increasing transplant-related morbidity and mortality or resorting to splenectomy pre-BMT.
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