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Transplantation and Cellular Therapy ; 29(2 Supplement):S348-S349, 2023.
Article in English | EMBASE | ID: covidwho-2316714

ABSTRACT

Introduction: Allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (alloHSCT) is a potentially curative option for patients with hematologic diseases. When considered candidates, patients face barriers to receive a transplant. Therefore, we aimed to analyze factors that limit or favor access to an alloHSCT in a population that has been HLA typed and therefore with a potential intent-to-transplant. Method(s): We retrospectively reviewed records from 2015 until the start of the COVID19 pandemic in two Mexican government- funded transplant centers and one private that have in-house HLA typing;in two of them, an outpatient transplant strategy is followed for most patients. HLA-typed patients who were potentially eligible for transplantation were included and their outcomes were assessed in an intent-to-transplant basis. We compared the outcomes of patients who underwent transplantation to those who did not and evaluated contributing barriers to access alloHSCT with multivariate logistic regression. Result(s): A total of n=374 patients were analyzed. The median age at HLA-typing was 35 years (IQR 23-47);59.3% had acute(Table Presented) leukemia, 17.4% bone marrow failure or myelodysplastic neoplasms, 13.1% lymphoma, 8% myeloproliferative neoplasms, 1.1% chronic lymphocytic leukemia and 1.1% multiple myeloma. Most patients (55.9%) had government insurance coverage. Median time from diagnosis to HLA-typing was 8 months (IQR 3-19). The majority had a potential donor (94.4%): 56.4% haploidentical, 37.4% a matched sibling donor and 0.5% an unrelated donor. Almost half of them received a transplant (n=185, 49.5%), the median time from HLA-typing to alloHSCT was 2 months (IQR 1-5.5). Disease activity or progression was the biggest barrier for transplantation;Table 1. Donor availability limited transplant access for 12.1% of patients. Access to transplantation was favored by private/out-of-pocket payment (OR 2.1 95% CI 1.3-3.4), and receiving care in the outpatient center (OR 6.4 95% CI 4-10.0), while HLA matching was not (OR 1.2 95% CI 0.8-1.8). Non-relapse mortality in alloHSCT was 21%. Median overall survival (OS) from the intent-to-transplant cohort was 16 months (CI 95% 12.4-19.6). An OS landmark analysis for patients alive at or beyond 2 months (the median time from HLA-typing to alloHSCT) showed prolonged survival in alloHSCT (30 vs 12 months, p <.001), Figure 1. By the time of the analysis 159 patients (42.5%) were still alive and 115 (30.7%) were event-free.(Figure Presented)Conclusion: The most frequent barrier to transplantation was the disease itself, followed by the transplant waitlist and comorbidities. Access to resources and an outpatient strategy or "center effect" favored alloHSCT. In the era of haploidentical transplantation, donor availability was a smaller issue. Efforts to improve timely referrals and access to effective pre-transplant therapies should be undertaken.Copyright © 2023 American Society for Transplantation and Cellular Therapy

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