We evaluated the feasibility of T-cell-depleted haploidentical hematopoietic SCT (HHCT) in pediatric patients. Between July 2008 and January 2013, 28 patients underwent ex vivo T-cell-depleted HHCT; 9 had hematologic malignancy, 18 had nonmalignant hematologic disease, and 1 had refractory neuroblastoma. Twenty-six patients achieved neutrophil engraftment at a median of 11 days (range, 9-15 days). Two patients failed to achieve primary engraftment and five experienced graft rejection after primary engraftment. These seven patients achieved stable engraftment after a second HHCT. The cumulative incidences (CIs) of⩾grade II and⩾grade III acute GVHD were 33.3% and 14.3%, respectively, and the 1-year CI of extensive chronic GVHD was 11.1%. Four patients died of non-relapse-related causes (two of CMV disease, one of encephalopathy and one of autoimmune hemolytic anemia) and one of leukemia relapse. Non-relapse mortality at 100 days, 1 year and 2 years was 0.0%, 10.7% and 14.3%, respectively. At a median follow-up of 32.8 months (range, 17.0-72.5 months), the 2-year OS was 82.1%. OSs for nonmalignant diseases and malignant diseases were 94.4% and 60.0%, respectively (P=0.019). Thus, HHCT is a realistic alternative for patients with malignant or nonmalignant diseases who lack a suitable donor.
Trial registration: ClinicalTrials.gov NCT01105273 NCT01509300 NCT01759732.