To the editor:

Bhatia and colleagues1  recently published a comprehensive analysis on late mortality after allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT), providing interesting data about the functional status of 547 recipients and 319 siblings. At the time of this Collaborative Bone Marrow Transplant Survivor Study, patients and donors had a median age of 41.5 and 44 years, respectively, and a median time of 8.6 years after HSCT. By questionnaire, long-term survivors reported significantly more difficulties in integration back into society after HSCT, in holding down employment, or in obtaining or retaining health insurance compared with their siblings. These results provided additional information to the relatively scarce and partially conflicting reports on functional status in the long-term recipients of HSCT surviving more than 10 years.2,3 

In order to obtain a comprehensive overview on physical and mental health in very long-term survivors after HSCT, we invited 44 recipients and their respective HLA-identical sibling donors to take part in a prospective study at the University Hospital of Basel. Both the recipients and their donors were controlled at the same time point, in pairs, and were given a complete clinical and biologic examination. Each answered a Short Form 36 (SF-36) Health Survey,4,5  which provides the generic health status measure using 36 items assessing 8 different concepts (Table 1). Three of the concepts provide a score for physical health, 3 for mental health, and 2 for general health status. These 8 concepts are summarized in 2 global tests, one for physical and one for mental health. Norm-based scores were used, in which 50 represents the mean score, and 10 the standard deviation for the general population. The median age of the recipients and donors at time of the study was 44.3 years (24-63) and 43.4 years (22-61), respectively, with a median time of 17.5 years (range, 11-26 years) after HSCT. Four patients received an HSCT for aplastic anemia and 40 for hematologic malignancies. All patients received bone marrow as stem cell source and total body irradiation was part of the conditioning in 39 patients (89%). Acute graft-versus-host disease (GVHD) was observed in 31 (70%), and chronic GVHD in 22 (50%) patients.

Table 1

Short Form 36 Health Survey: Paired comparison between recipients and their respective donor

ItemsDonor*Recipient*P
Items describing physical health 
    Physical functioning 54.7 50.9 .001 
    Role limitations due to physical health 54.6 52.3 .213 
    Bodily pain 59.2 54.9 .042 
Items describing general health (physical and mental) 
    General health perception 57.0 50.7 .001 
    Vitality 65.4 52.3 .039 
Items describing mental health 
    Social functioning 54.0 51.2 .324 
    Role limitations due to emotional problems 53.9 51.0 .285 
    Mental health 52.7 50.9 .638 
Global tests 
    Physical Component Summary (PCS) 57.1 52.8 .001 
    Mental Component Summary (MCS) 52.9 50.8 .831 
ItemsDonor*Recipient*P
Items describing physical health 
    Physical functioning 54.7 50.9 .001 
    Role limitations due to physical health 54.6 52.3 .213 
    Bodily pain 59.2 54.9 .042 
Items describing general health (physical and mental) 
    General health perception 57.0 50.7 .001 
    Vitality 65.4 52.3 .039 
Items describing mental health 
    Social functioning 54.0 51.2 .324 
    Role limitations due to emotional problems 53.9 51.0 .285 
    Mental health 52.7 50.9 .638 
Global tests 
    Physical Component Summary (PCS) 57.1 52.8 .001 
    Mental Component Summary (MCS) 52.9 50.8 .831 
*

Numbers are means of norm-based scores.

In a paired comparison, recipients showed a significantly lower rank of the norm-based scores for all questions related to physical well-being, except for role limitation, but no difference in the mental health scores compared with their respective donors (Table 1). This is confirmed by the global test for physical (P = .001) and mental (P = .831) health. Physical health was significantly lower in patients with extensive chronic GVHD (P = .05), in females (P = .024), in recipients older than 25 years at HSCT (P = .024) or older than 42 years at study evaluation (P = .05). None of these factors had an impact on mental heath status (MCS, P > .10). In summary, our data extend the findings reported by Bhatia et al1  on the functional health status in long-term survivors, validating the finding that the physical health status of very long-term survivors after HSCT can be impaired, while mental health status remains preserved.

This study was supported by the Horton Foundation and by the Swiss National Research Foundation grant 3200130-1181176.

Conflict-of-interest disclosure: The authors declare no competing financial interests.

Correspondence: Alicia Rovó, Department of Hematology, Petersgraben 4, University Hospital of Basel, Basel 4031, Switzerland; e-mail: arovo@uhbs.ch.

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