Background:In recent years, with the application of HIV combined with resistance retroviral therapy, the number of AIDS-NHL patients has gradually increased, surpassing Kaposi's sarcoma and becoming the first AIDS-related tumor. The prognosis of AIDS-NHL patients is worse than that of ordinary NHL patients, and more powerful treatment is needed. To analyze the safety and efficacy of 9 AIDS-related non-Hodgkin lymphoma (AIDS-related non-Hodgkin lymphoma, AIDS-NHL) treated with autologous hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (auto-hematopoietic stem cell transplantation, ASCT).

Methods: 9 patients with AIDS-NHL were prospectively treated for their safety and efficacy.

Results: The male to female ratio of 9 AIDS-NHL patients was 8:1, and the median age was 38 years. The pathology types were 4 DLBCL, 2 PBL, 1 BL, 1 HGBL and 1 HL, including 3 patients with refractory relapse (1 each of DLBCL, HGBL and PBL). Except for three patients with refractory relapse, the remaining six patients underwent first-line autologous HSCT. One PBL stage was in stage I low-risk group and the remaining patients were in stage III - IV high-risk group. Before transplantation, one patient was progressive, one patient was in partial remission, and the other patients achieved complete remission after chemotherapy. All patients underwent autologous HSC mobilization using PEG-G-CSF, with all CD34 + cell numbers> 210 ^ 6 / Kg. Transplantation pretreatment was performed with the BeEAM protocol, with a median time to granulocyte engraftment of 11 days and a median time to platelet engraftment of 14 days, with no transplant-related death. Two patients who did not achieve CR before transplantation all died due to disease progression within 3 months after transplantation, and the remaining patients remained in complete disease remission through follow-up until February 28,2023.

Conclusion: AIDS-NHL patients are aggressive and have a poor prognosis, and active treatment is needed to improve their long-term survival. Our center prospectively performed autologous HSCT in nine patients with AIDS-NHL, and the results showed that the time of granulocyte and platelet engraftment was consistent with that of ordinary NHL patients, with no transplant-related death and was well tolerated. Failure to achieve complete remission before transplantation may be one of the adverse factors for the early death of patients.

No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.

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