Allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HCT) is curative in many patients with advanced hematopoietic malignancies. Donor T cells not only facilitate engraftment and protect against opportunistic pathogens and residual disease, but can also cause graft-versus-host disease (GVHD), with significant morbidity and mortality. Complete T-cell depletion can not only substantially reduce GVHD rates but can also delay immune reconstitution and increase rates of opportunistic infections and relapse. Murine models have shown that naive T cells (TNs) consistently cause severe GVHD, whereas memory T cells cause milder or no GVHD and have critical graft-versus-tumor function. Informed by experiments performed in murine models of HCT, clinical trials are being conducted to evaluate TN-depleted peripheral blood stem cell (PBSC) grafts. These trials are showing very low rates of chronic GVHD and of serious acute GVHD in the HLA-matched HCT setting, with lower frequencies of opportunistic infections than after fully T-cell–depleted HCT and no apparent increase in relapse rates. Randomized clinical trials are ongoing, comparing standard unselected HCT with TN-depleted PBSCs and other promising GVHD-reduction strategies. Correlative laboratory studies will clarify how antitumor function is retained in TN-depleted HCT and inform strategies to further augment graft-versus-leukemia in patients at a high risk of relapse. TN depletion of donor lymphocyte infusions and of haploidentical stem cell grafts is also being investigated.

Download or subscribe to the Blood Advances Talk podcast at https://soundcloud.com/blood-advances.

The complete text of this Blood Advances Talk is available as a data supplement.

Download or subscribe to the Blood Advances Talks podcast at https://soundcloud.com/blood-advances.

The complete text of this Blood Advances Talk is available as a data supplement.

Contribution: M.B. wrote the script.

Conflict-of-interest disclosure: M.B. has received compensation from Miltenyi Biotec (manufacturers of CD45RA immunomagnetic beads) for presentations at conferences and corporate symposiums. Miltenyi Biotec is contributing to the funding of a clinical trial (NCT 03779854; 16-NTCD): a Pediatric Transplantation and Cellular Therapy Consortium (PBMTC) multicenter randomized controlled trial of naive T-cell–depleted peripheral blood stem cell transplantation for which M.B. serves as the principal investigator. M.B. is also a founder and scientific advisory board member of HighPassBio, and a scientific advisory board member of Orca Bio.

Correspondence: Marie Bleakley, Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center, 1100 Fairview Ave North, Seattle, WA 98109; e-mail: mbleakle@fredhutch.org.

Supplemental data