Microtransplantation
Microtransplantation is an advanced technology to treat malignant hematological diseases and tumors by infusing patients with granulocyte colony-stimulating factor mobilized human leukocyte antigen -mismatched allogeneic peripheral blood stem cells following a reduced-intensity chemotherapy or targeted therapy. The term "microtransplantation" comes from its mechanism of reaching donor cell microchimerism.
Chemotherapy is used by lower doses only to destroy cancer and partially suppress patient’s immune system, which will be reinitiated by donor’s stem cells soon after transplantation, and will play a role as recipient-versus-tumor effect combining donor cells’ graft-versus-tumor effect. Donor’s stem cells, which have been processed, will also accelerate functional recovery of recipient’s hematopoietic stem cells, greatly reducing infections and transplant-related mortality. Practices of microtransplantation has shown none graft-versus-host disease till present, thus immunosuppressive drugs for relieving GVHD wouldn't be necessary. Possible mechanisms of the successful avoidance of GVHD include donor cell microchimerism, less-toxic cells processed prior to transplantation, and the preservation of host immune system that is capable of resisting the GVH alloresponse. Moreover, as HLA-mismatched stem cells are employed, donor availability is extremely extended.
Medical uses
Indications
Indications for microtransplantation are as follows:Hematologic Malignancies Tumors
- Acute myeloid leukemia
- chronic-phase chronic myeloid leukemia
- Myelodysplastic syndromes
- Intermediate- or high-risk Non-Hodgkin lymphoma
- High-risk Hodgkin lymphoma
- Multiplemyeloma
- Severe aplastic anemia
Stem cell sources
Donor’s Requirements:
- Mismatched HLA with recipient
- Age between 18 and 60 years old
- Good overall state of health
- No major heart or lung surgical history
- No infectious diseases such as HIV, hepatitis or syphilis, etc.
- No bone marrow disorder, high blood pressure, coronary heart disease, cardiopulmonary insufficiency, hematological disorder or tumor
- Not allergic to G-CSF
- Not pregnant or lactating
Clinical studies
In another long-term research from 2004–2011, 101 patients with AML-CR1 received Microtransplantation regimen. The 6-year leukemia-free survival and overall survival rates were 84.4% and 89.5%, respectively, in the low-risk group, which were similar to the rates in the intermediate-risk group ; The 6-year LFS and OS were 76.4% and 82.1%, respectively, in patients who received a high dose of donor CD3+ T cells, which were significantly higher than the LFS and OS in patients who received a lower dose of donor CD3+ T cells. No GVHD was observed in any of the patients.
The positive results have also been verified by healthcare centers in Italy, America, Spain, etc.
Led by Dr. Huisheng Ai and his medical team at MST International Clinic for Leukemia in the 307th Hospital of Chinese People’s Liberation Army located in Beijing, multicenter collaborative study on Microtransplantation has started since 2013 in nine authoritative blood institutes from China, Duke University and Keck School of Medicine-University of Southern California in United States, University of Sydney in Australia and University of Montreal in Canada.