After an allogeneic stem cell transplant, a recipient’s body faces a daunting task: rebuilding the person’s blood-forming and immune systems from the ground up from a relatively small number of “seed” cells obtained from their donor.
To achieve this, the donated cells must replicate again and again — and again.
It’s a cycle that might put recipients at risk if a new, potentially harmful mutation arises or if a mutation present in the donated cells is reproduced many times over. Researchers from Fred Hutch Cancer Center set out to determine how common such issues are. The results, published in Science Translational Medicine, surprised them.
In this Q&A, lead author Masumi Ueda Oshima, MD, MA, explains the study and its implications. Ueda Oshima is an associate professor in Fred Hutch’s Clinical Research Division.
What question were you trying to answer with this study, and why?
When we do an allogeneic stem cell transplant, we are putting only a very small proportion of the donor’s stem cells into the recipient, and that small number of cells has to recreate an entirely new blood-forming system and immune system for the recipient. This means the cells have to divide much more frequently in the recipient than in the donor, who goes on with their life normally.
Our basic question was: Does the increased replication of the stem cells in the recipient cause more changes in the DNA, more mutations, than in the donor, especially after many years or even decades?
Why would an increase in mutations be of interest?
If the transplanted stem cells acquire new mutations over time, there’s a chance some of the mutations could predispose a recipient to blood diseases, like myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS) or leukemia. We already knew the incidence of donor-derived leukemias after transplant is very low. But we still wanted to see whether there are potentially dangerous mutations that could happen in transplant recipients, especially after a long time has passed.
How did you go about investigating this?
We are fortunate at Fred Hutch to have a very robust Long-Term Follow-Up Program for transplant recipients. So, we have contact information for people who were transplanted at Fred Hutch as far back as the 1970s. We reached out to survivors from this list about participating in the study and asked if it would also be OK to contact their donors.
For the study, we enrolled 16 recipient-donor pairs who were between about 6 and 46 years out from transplant. Each sent us a blood sample through the mail. Then we worked with TwinStrand Biosciences to do genetic sequencing studies looking with great sensitivity at how mutations in the recipients compared with mutations in their donors.
We also checked the research cell bank at Fred Hutch for any archived DNA or cells from the donors taken at the time of transplant, and we found samples for 11 of the 16. This provided a really unique opportunity to look at mutations that existed in the donor back then and how these mutations may have changed in both the donor and the recipient during the years since the transplant. In other words, it gave us a way to directly compare how these blood cells were aging in the donor versus the recipient.
This study, in addition to being very scientifically intriguing, really speaks to the legacy of transplant being developed and advanced here at Fred Hutch. I don’t think there’s any other institution in the world that could have done this type of research because of the long-term follow-up that we have here and also the access to historical samples.