Hematopoietic stem cell transplantation as treatment for patients with DOCK8 deficiency

SE Aydin, AF Freeman, W Al-Herz, HA Al-Mousa… - The Journal of Allergy …, 2019 - Elsevier
SE Aydin, AF Freeman, W Al-Herz, HA Al-Mousa, RK Arnaout, RC Aydin, V Barlogis…
The Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology: In Practice, 2019Elsevier
Background Biallelic variations in the dedicator of cytokinesis 8 (DOCK8) gene cause a
combined immunodeficiency with eczema, recurrent bacterial and viral infections, and
malignancy. Natural disease outcome is dismal, but allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell
transplantation (HSCT) can cure the disease. Objective To determine outcome of HSCT for
DOCK8 deficiency and define possible outcome variables. Methods We performed a
retrospective study of the results of HSCT in a large international cohort of DOCK8-deficient …
Background
Biallelic variations in the dedicator of cytokinesis 8 (DOCK8) gene cause a combined immunodeficiency with eczema, recurrent bacterial and viral infections, and malignancy. Natural disease outcome is dismal, but allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT) can cure the disease.
Objective
To determine outcome of HSCT for DOCK8 deficiency and define possible outcome variables.
Methods
We performed a retrospective study of the results of HSCT in a large international cohort of DOCK8-deficient patients.
Results
We identified 81 patients from 22 centers transplanted at a median age of 9.7 years (range, 0.7-27.2 years) between 1995 and 2015. After median follow-up of 26 months (range, 3-135 months), 68 (84%) patients are alive. Severe acute (III-IV) or chronic graft versus host disease occurred in 11% and 10%, respectively. Causes of death were infections (n = 5), graft versus host disease (5), multiorgan failure (2), and preexistent lymphoma (1). Survival after matched related (n = 40) or unrelated (35) HSCT was 89% and 81%, respectively. Reduced-toxicity conditioning based on either treosulfan or reduced-dose busulfan resulted in superior survival compared with fully myeloablative busulfan-based regimens (97% vs 78%; P = .049). Ninety-six percent of patients younger than 8 years at HSCT survived, compared with 78% of those 8 years and older (P = .06). Of the 73 patients with chimerism data available, 65 (89%) had more than 90% donor T-cell chimerism at last follow-up. Not all disease manifestations responded equally well to HSCT: eczema, infections, and mollusca resolved quicker than food allergies or failure to thrive.
Conclusions
HSCT is curative in most DOCK8-deficient patients, confirming this approach as the treatment of choice. HSCT using a reduced-toxicity regimen may offer the best chance for survival.
Elsevier