(HealthDay)—Individuals who underwent allogeneic blood or marrow transplantation (BMT) in childhood have elevated risk of late mortality 25 years or more after transplantation, according to a study published online July 26 in JAMA Oncology.
Anna Sällfors Holmqvist, M.D., Ph.D., from Lund University in Sweden, and colleagues conducted a retrospective cohort study of individuals who lived two years or more after undergoing allogeneic BMT in childhood. Data were included for 1,388 individuals who lived two years or more after allogeneic BMT performed at a median age of 14.6 years.
The researchers found that there were 295 deaths in the cohort, for an overall survival rate of 79.3 percent at 20 years after BMT. Infection and/or chronic graft-versus-host disease, primary disease, and subsequent malignant neoplasms were the leading causes of death (49.6, 24.6, and 18.4 percent, respectively). Compared with the general population, the cohort had a 14.4-fold increased risk for death. At 25 years or more after BMT, relative mortality remained elevated (standardized mortality ratio, 2.9). Over time, the 10-year cumulative incidence of late mortality decreased (before 1990, 18.9 percent; 1990 to 1999, 12.8 percent; 2000 to 2010, 10.9 percent); after adjustment for demographics and clinical factors, this decrease remained significant.
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