Graft Versus Host Disease Flashcards

1
Q

In what setting does graft versus host disease usually occur?

A

Allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplants

  • Can also occur in transfusion of non-irradiated blood to immunocompromised hosts, maternal-fetal transmission and solid organ transplant (small intenstin>lier>kindey>heart)
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2
Q

What is the most important predictor of graft versus host disease occurring?

A

HLA compatibility

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3
Q

Why is the rate of graft versus host disease increasing in recent years?

A

There is increasing use of matched unrelated donors.

These pts are more likely to have small differences in HLA mismatch compared to matched related donors

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4
Q

What sources of stem cells most increase the risk for graft versus host disease?

A

Peripheral blood (PB-HSCT) > bone marrow > cord blood

  • There is increased popularity of the peripheral blood HSCT in the US due to ease of collection, but need to consider GVHD risk
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5
Q

How can the pre-conditioning technique affect the risk for graft versus host disease?

A

Myeloablative preconditioning increases the risk of GVHD due to damage to host tissues.

  • Many centers now do non-myeloablative reduced-intensity conditioning but this can also delay the onset of GVHD to beyond the classic 100 days (delayed-onset acute GVHD)
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6
Q

What are the risks of developing graft versus host disease in HSCT recipients?

A

HLA-matched = 40%

HLA-mismatched = 60-70%

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7
Q

What organ is most affected by graft versus host disease?

A

The skin

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8
Q

How is a periphereal blood HSCT done?

A

The patient is treated with a colony-stimulating factor (filgrastim) which mobilizes the donor stem cells into the peripheral blood and then this can be aphoresed off and infused into the recipient

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9
Q

What is the pathogenesis of acute graft versus host disease?

A
  1. Activation of host antigen-presenting cells
  2. Host antigen-presenting cells bind altered host proteins/neo-antigens
  3. Donor lymphocytes recognize altered host protein antigen-presenting cell complexes and proliferate and target host tissue in skin, GI tract, and liver
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10
Q

What is the pathogenesis of chronic graft versus host?

A

Largely unknown

  • Early: IFN-gamma, increased regulatory T-cells, and T-cell cytokine response (IL-2Ralpha).
  • Late: Lack of Th2 shift, B-cell activation via soluble BAFF, induction of Toll-like receptor 9 highly expressing B cells, and autoantibody formation
  • Chronic lichenoid GVHD shows some Th1/th17 signature suggesting these treatments could be helpful
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11
Q

What is the timing of acute GVHD?

A

Occurring within the first 100 days after transplant (this is considered not essential for diagnosis now)

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12
Q

What is the typical timing of acute graft versus host disease after HSCT?

A

2-6 weeks after (peak incidence is 30 days after)

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13
Q

What is the most common presenting morphology of acute graft versus host disease?

A

Morbilliform eruption on the acral surfaces (hands, feet, ears)

Clues: Acral erythema, violaceous hue on-ear, follicular/peri-eccrine erythema (darker punctate lesions help distinguish from simple morbilliform eruptions)

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14
Q

What systemic effects can be seen in acute graft versus host disease?

A

GI tract: nausea, voluminous diarrhea, abdominal pain

Liver: transaminitis, cholestasis, bilirubin elevation)

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15
Q

What are the 3 components of acute graft versus host disease staging?

A
  • Skin: severity assessed by % BSA
  • GI: severity assessed by the volume of diarrhea (and severe abdominal pain)
  • Liver: severity assessed by the degree of bilirubin elevation

Note that there are also histologic gradings of acute graft versus host disease

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16
Q

How many grades of acute graft versus host disease are there?

A

There are 4 stages ranging from 1-4.

17
Q

What are the 4 stages of histologic acute graft versus host disease?

A
  1. focal vacuolar change of basal keratinocytes
  2. Grade I plus necrotic keratinocytes in the epidermis and/or hair follicles and dermal lymphocytic infiltrate
  3. Grade II plus a fusion of basilar vacuoles to form clefts and microvesicles
  4. Grade III plus large areas of separation of the epidermis from the dermis
18
Q

What is the classic definition for the timing of chronic graft versus host disease?

A

>100 days (now considered to be arbitrary and not part of diagnosis)

19
Q

How often is chronic graft versus host disease preceded by acute graft versus host disease?

A

50% of the time

20
Q

What are the two classifications of clinical graft versus host disease?

A

Non-sclerotic GVHD vs sclerotic GVHD

21
Q

What are the clinical features of non-sclerotic chronic graft versus host disease?

A

Often but not always precedes sclerotic chronic graft versus host disease

  • Most common presentation is the lichenoid eruption (80% of cases): coalescent, slightly scaly, violacious-to-pink papules arranged in a reticulate pattern. Most common sites for this are dorsal hands/feet, forearms, and trunk
  • Other forms include atopic dermatitis-like psoriasiform, poikilodermatous, lupus-like and keratosis pilaris-like
22
Q

What is the most common clinical morphology of non-sclerotic chronic graft versus host disease?

A

Lichenoid: dorsal hands/feet, forearms, trunk –> coalescent, slightly scaly violaceous -to-pink papules arranged in reticulate pattern

23
Q

What is the clinical presentation of sclerotic graft versus host disease?

A

Favors areas of pressure, many morphologies

  • Lichen sclerosis-like
  • sclerodermoid/morphea-like plaques: unlike true scleroderma, the distribution is more patchy and lacks classic features of scleroderma (bird faces, puffy/indurated hands, sclerodactyly)
  • eosinophilic fasciitis like
24
Q

What can help distinguish GVHD from drug reactions?

A

Apoptotic cells in adnexal structures (hair follicles and sweat ducts)

25
Q

What epidermal changes are seen in acute GVHD?

A

Epidermal dysmaturation (looks like Bowenoid AK or chemotherapy effect)

26
Q

Histologic findings in chronic GVHD?

A

Lichenoid: similar to LP but less dense of an infiltrate

Sclerotic: dermal sclerosis plus-minus subcutaneous and fascial fibrosis, may see overlying vacuolar or lichenoid interface

27
Q

What workup should be performed for graft versus host disease?

A

Tissue biopsy in both

Acute: bilirubin, CMP (liver enzymes), diarrhea volume measured

Chronic: MRI can detect fasciitis and may eliminate need for fascial biopsy

28
Q

What prophylaxis is used for graft versus host disease?

A

Often MTX + cyclosproin or tacrolimus

29
Q

Treatment of acute graft versus host disease?

A

If it is limited/skin only disease can use topical steroids, TCIs, and phototherapy

  • For most cases that have skin + internal organ involvement) systemic steroids are the first line and are added to existing immunosuppressants
30
Q

How effective are systemic steroids for graft versus host disease involving skin + internal organs?

A

Only 50% tend to respond, in those that don’t respond mortality is high (70%)

31
Q

What is the treatment for chronic graft versus host disease?

A

Very difficult to treat, can try topical and systemic corticosteroids added to the immunosuppressive regimen, but again only 50% respond

  • Second line, nothing shown to be effective, can try ECP, PUVA +/- isotretinoin, imatinib, and mTOR inhibitors
32
Q

What is the prognosis of acute graft versus host disease?

A

Overall: 30-50% mortality if moderate to severe dz

  • If steroid-resistant 70% mortality
33
Q

What is the most common cause of death in chronic graft versus host disease?

A

Infection

34
Q

What medication can decrease the incidence of visceral graft versus host disease and how does it do it?

A

Maraviroc (CCR5 inhibitor) can decrease visceral GVHD by blocking CCR5 mediated CD8+ T-cell recruitment to the liver and gut

  • Can be considered in pt’s with high risk for GVHD
35
Q

Does the addition of Maraviroc decrease the incidence of graft versus host disease?

A

No, only decreases the incidence of visceral involvement

36
Q

What other organs can be involved in chronic graft versus host disease?

A

Eyes (keratoconjunctivitis sicca, blepharitis, corneal erosions), salivary glands (sicca syndrome), and lungs (bronchiolitis obliterans)

Less commonly: esophagus (strictures/webs, less common), liver and pancreas (exocrine insufficiency)