Abstract 2223

Poster Board II-200

Introduction:

In general it is expected that strong immune suppression that alleviates GVHD, will increase the risk of relapse. Alefacept (Amevive®) is an immunosuppressive dimeric fusion protein that is used for psoriasis control. We showed its remarkable effect in acute steroid resistant/dependent and chronic extensive GVHD.

Methods:

To date, 42 patients with a median age of 31.5 years (range 3-66) were treated by us with alefacept due to acute (n=28) or chronic (n=14) steroid resistant/dependent GVHD (27 males, 15 females). Twenty were transplanted from HLA matched family members, 14 from HLA matched unrelated donors, 8 from mismatched donors and 2 from unrelated cord blood units. Pretreatment acute GVHD grade ranged 2-4 (median 3) and involved the skin (30), gut (19) and liver (7). All the patients with chronic GVHD had extensive involvement prior to therapy.

Results:

The median time from transplantation to alefacept was 42.5 days and 13 months in acute and chronic GVHD respectively (range 18-110d and 3-47.5m) and a median of 9 (range 1-25) injections that were given per patient. Thirty-four out of the 41 evaluable patients (83%) responded to the treatment (23/28 and 11/13 in the acute and chronic group respectively). Despite this high response rate, demonstrating the deep immunosuppressive and immunomodulative effect of alefacept, only 5/41 evaluable patients (figure 1) have relapsed (with a median follow-up of 30.8 months on the 17 survivors). Other than the 5 patients that relapsed (all treated with calcineurin inhibitor and steroids), full-donor peripheral blood chimerism (100% donor cells and no residual host-type DNA) was stable throughout the treatment period and later in all but one patient, that developed mixed chimerism under alefacept treatment. His chimerism returned to full-donor chimerism with taper-down of immune suppression. Currently, 17/42 (40.5%) patients are alive (figure 1), most with improved or stable GVHD. Twenty-six patients died due to either: GVHD progression (n=14), progression of the basic disease (n=4), infections (n=5) or other causes (n=3).

Conclusions:

Alefacept is effective and safe for the treatment of acute or chronic steroid resistant/dependent GVHD and may discriminate between GVHD and GVL.

Disclosures:

No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.

Author notes

*

Asterisk with author names denotes non-ASH members.

Sign in via your Institution