The European landscape on allogeneic haematopoeietic cell transplantation in Chronic Lymphocytic Leukaemia between 2009 and 2019: a perspective from the Chronic Malignancies Working Party of the EBMT

Olivier Tournilhac*, Michel van Gelder, Dirk-Jan Eikema, Nienke Zinger, Peter Dreger, Martin Bornhaeuser, Vladan Vucinic, Christof Scheid, Jan J. Cornelissen, Thomas Schroeder, Pavel Jindra, Henrik Sengeloev, Stephanie Nguyen Quoc, Matthias Stelljes, Igor Wolfgang Blau, Jiri Mayer, Shankara Paneesha, Patrice Chevallier, Edouard Forcade, Nicolaus KroegerDidier Blaise, John Gribben, Bendt Nielsen, Jan-Erik Johansson, Charalampia Kyriakou, Yves Beguin, Pietro Pioltelli, Antonia Sampol, Donal P. McLornan, Johannes Schetelig, Patrick J. Hayden, Ibrahim Yakoub-Agha

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

Allogeneic transplantation (allo-HCT) is a curative treatment in CLL whose efficacy including the most severe forms had led to the 2006 EBMT recommendations. The advent after 2014 of targeted therapies has revolutionized CLL management, allowing prolonged control to patients who have failed immunochemotherapy and/or have TP53 alterations. We analysed the pre COVID pandemic 2009-2019 EBMT registry. The yearly number of allo-HCT raised to 458 in 2011 yet dropped from 2013 onwards to an apparent plateau above 100. Within the 10 countries who were under the EMA for drug approval and performed 83.5% of those procedures, large initial differences were found but the annual number converged to 2-3 per 10 million inhabitants during the 3 most recent years suggesting that allo-HCT remains applied in selected patients. Long-term follow-up on targeted therapies shows that most patients relapse, some early, with risk factors and resistance mechanisms being described. The treatment of patients exposed to both BCL2 and BTK inhibitors and especially those with double refractory disease will become a challenge in which allo-HCT remains a solid option in competition with emerging therapies that have yet to demonstrate their long-term effectiveness.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)621-624
Number of pages4
JournalBone Marrow Transplantation
Volume58
Issue number6
Early online date1 Mar 2023
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Jun 2023

Keywords

  • CLL

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