In this issue of Blood, Gibson et al provide provocative information suggesting that use of otherwise normal stem cell donors with clonal hematopoiesis of indeterminate potential (CHIP) results in impaired hematopoietic recovery following allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT).1 

The x-axis represents months from the time of transplantation until detection of clonal hematopoiesis in the patient. The y-axis indicates the variant allele fraction (VAF). The VAF at time 0 is measured from the donor stem cell product. The VAF at later times is from the patient.

The x-axis represents months from the time of transplantation until detection of clonal hematopoiesis in the patient. The y-axis indicates the variant allele fraction (VAF). The VAF at time 0 is measured from the donor stem cell product. The VAF at later times is from the patient.

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The authors retrospectively reviewed results of 552 patients who underwent allogeneic HSCT and identified 89 patients (16%) who had at least 1 cytopenia beyond day 100 after HSCT. Among those 89 patients, a probable cause for the cytopenia was identified in 83 cases, while in 6 patients (∼1% overall), no obvious cause could be found. In these 6 cases, DNMT3A mutations were found in 5 patients, with confirmation as donor origin by sequencing archival donor stem cells. Twenty-four of the 83 cases with explainable cytopenia also underwent mutation testing, and none showed mutations. These data suggest a strong association between the development of otherwise unexplained cytopenias post-HSCT and use of donors with CHIP.

Allogeneic HSCT is increasingly used to treat patients in their sixth, seventh, and even eighth decade of life, resulting in a greater use of older related donors. Given the frequency of CHIP in otherwise normal individuals in this age group, the current study raises many questions: (1) How strong is the association between use of a CHIP-positive donor and impaired hematologic recovery? These data suggest that the association is almost absolute: 5 out of 6 patients with unexplained cytopenias had CHIP-positive donors, while none of the 24 patients without unexplained cytopenias had such donors (however, only a handful of these 24 cases were older, so the difference may not be as striking as it appears). (2) How large does the CHIP clone have to be in the donor to be consequential? The usual methods for detecting such clones have a limit of detection of 2% to 3%. Many donors categorized as CHIP negative likely have small clones below the limits of detection. The median clone size in the 5 patients with unexplained cytopenia and mutations was ∼4% (range, 2.6-11). Can a clone at a level of only 0.5% do the same? (3) Which donors are at highest risk for being CHIP positive? Is this strictly age related? Are first-degree relatives of patients with hematologic malignancies at higher risk? (4) What are the clinical consequences of using a CHIP-positive donor? While the development of a single cytopenia beyond day 100 post-HSCT is concerning, it is unclear what this means long-term, as few details about the duration of cytopenias or other transplant outcomes were provided in this report. Are the cytopenias of limited clinical consequence, or do they signal major defects in multiple aspects of graft function? (5) Does the mutational basis of the clone influence outcome? Only DNMT3A mutations were represented in the report and, while these are the most frequent mutations associated with CHIP, other mutations, including TET2 and ASXL1, have been identified.2,3  Are these other mutations likewise associated with impaired hematopoietic recovery? (6) Assuming the current results are confirmed, why does the use of a CHIP-positive donor increase the risk of post-HSCT cytopenias? Apparently, the donors had normal hematopoiesis at the time of collection, and there was no indication of any abnormality in the ability to mobilize and collect stem cells, at least as measured by CD34+ cell content. Following transplant and engraftment, the abnormal clone did not expand and continued to represent an allelic fraction very similar to that in the donor (see figure). Why then did this fraction apparently impair hematopoiesis in the recipient, but not in the donor? Does the abnormal clone behave similarly in the patient as in the donor, or does transplantation, immunosuppression, and other environmental features influence its behavior? (7) With longer follow-up, what will be the fate of the abnormal clone? In 1 of the 5 patients with CHIP, there was evidence of clonal evolution with the acquisition of additional mutations in ASXL1 and TP53 but without evidence of clinical progression to myelodysplasia or acute leukemia. It is reassuring that no case evolved into overt myelodysplasia or leukemia, but the follow-up period may be too brief. Donor cell leukemia occurs in ∼0.1% of transplants, but how strongly this risk is impacted by the use of a CHIP-positive donor is unknown.4,5 

An obvious question is whether these findings should alter our current standard-care policies. The incidence of CHIP is rare in patients younger than 50 years, increases to 2% to 3% in patients 50 to 60 years, and then increases rapidly.2,3  Currently, the National Marrow Donor Program retires volunteer donors once they reach age 60 years. Should younger unrelated donors be used routinely instead of older matched siblings, or should older matched siblings be routinely tested for CHIP and excluded from donating if it is found? Several studies have retrospectively compared outcomes in older patients given younger allele-level 8/8 HLA-matched unrelated donor (MUD) vs older HLA-matched sibling (MSD) transplants.6-8  A Center for International Blood and Marrow Transplant Research report of >2000 transplants found more acute and chronic graft-versus-host disease using younger MUDs than with older MSDs and, in good-risk patients, increased overall mortality with the use of MUDs. These data, combined with the longer delay in initiating transplantation and an increased burden on volunteer donors, argue against a wholesale move to the use of younger unrelated donors when older matched siblings are available. Screening older donors for CHIP is certainly feasible, but it is expensive. We agree with Gibson et al that a larger study of donor–recipient pairs, perhaps enriched for older patients with long follow-up, would be of enormous benefit in helping us better understand the frequency and implications of CHIP among otherwise normal stem cell donors and in helping to set policy about how to approach issues of mutational screening and the use of older donors.

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

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