Preconditioning Frailty Phenotype Influences Survival and Relapse for Older Allogeneic Transplantation Recipients
•Older prefrail and frail patients have inferior survival after HCT due to relapse.•Septuagenarians have inferior survival after HCT due to nonrelapse mortality.•Age, frailty phenotype, Karnofsky Performance Status, and Disease Risk Index determine survival for older HCT recipients.•Disease risk ind...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Transplantation and cellular therapy 2024-04, Vol.30 (4), p.415.e1-415.e16 |
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Zusammenfassung: | •Older prefrail and frail patients have inferior survival after HCT due to relapse.•Septuagenarians have inferior survival after HCT due to nonrelapse mortality.•Age, frailty phenotype, Karnofsky Performance Status, and Disease Risk Index determine survival for older HCT recipients.•Disease risk index and frailty phenotype determine relapse for older HCT recipients.
Hematologic malignancies disproportionately affect older adults. Hematopoietic cell transplantation (HCT) is potentially curative, but poor overall survival (OS) has limited its use in older adults. Fried's frailty phenotype (FFP) is a geriatric assessment tool that combines objective and subjective performance measures: gait speed, grip strength, activity level, exhaustion, and weight loss. People meeting ≥3 criteria are classified as frail; 1 or 2 criteria, as pre-frail; and 0 criteria, as fit. To evaluate the association of pre-HCT FFP with post-HCT outcomes, we assessed FFP prior to conditioning for 280 HCT recipients age ≥60 years with acute leukemia or a myeloid neoplasm at 3 institutions. When analyzing survival by age group, patients age ≥70 years had inferior OS compared to patients age 60 to 69 years (P = .002), with corresponding OS estimates of 38.9% (95% confidence interval [CI], 27.8% to 49.9%) and 59.3% (95% CI, 51.9% to 65.9%). Nonrelapse mortality (NRM) also was significantly higher in the older patients (P = .0005); the 2-year cumulative incidences of NRM were 38.5% (95% CI, 27.5% to 49.2%) and 17.2% (95% CI, 12.3% to 22.8%), for older and younger recipients, respectively. The cumulative incidences of relapse did not differ by age group (P = .3435). Roughly one-third (35.5%) of the patients were fit, 57.5% were pre-frail, and 7.5% were frail, with corresponding 2-year OS estimates of 68.4% (95% CI, 57.9% to 76.8%), 45.5% (95% CI, 37.4% to 53.2%), and 45.8% (95% CI, 23.4% to 65.8%) (P = .013). FFP was not significantly associated with NRM, but being frail or pre-frail was associated with a higher rate of disease-related deaths (33.3% and 27.3%, respectively, compared with 17.4% for fit patients; P = .043). In univariate modeling of restricted mean survival time with a 3-year horizon (RMST_3y), the factors that were significantly associated were FFP, age, Karnofsky Performance Status (KPS), Disease Risk Index (DRI), and HCT-specific Comorbidity Index (HCT-CI). Of those factors, only FFP (P = .006), age (P = .006), KPS (P = .004), and DRI (P = .005) were significantly associated |
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ISSN: | 2666-6367 2666-6367 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.jtct.2024.01.062 |