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The conglomeration of staging gives rise to a grade. The grading system is as follows:
The conglomeration of staging gives rise to a grade. The grading system is as follows:


Grade 1: skin stage 1-2 with no liver or GI involvement
* Grade 1: skin stage 1-2 with no liver or GI involvement
Grade 2: skin stage 3 or liver stage 1 or GI stage 1
* Grade 2: skin stage 3 or liver stage 1 or GI stage 1
Grade 3: skin with any stage or liver stage 2-3 or GI stage 2-4
* Grade 3: skin with any stage or liver stage 2-3 or GI stage 2-4
Grade 4: skin stage 4 or liver stage 4 or GI with any stage
* Grade 4: skin stage 4 or liver stage 4 or GI with any stage





Revision as of 05:25, 13 June 2017

Graft-versus-host disease

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Editor-In-Chief: C. Michael Gibson, M.S., M.D. [1]

Overview

Classification can be related to time-of-onset or to disease severity. Time-of-onset classification divides GvHD into acute or chronic. Severity classification divides GvHD into stages and grades.

Classification

Clinically, graft-versus-host-disease is divided into acute and chronic forms.

  • The acute or fulminant form of the disease (aGVHD) is normally observed within the first 100 days post-transplant[1], and is a major challenge to transplants owing to associated morbidity and mortality[2].
  • The chronic form of graft-versus-host-disease (cGVHD) normally occurs after 100 days. The appearance of moderate to severe cases of cGVHD adversely influences long-term survival [3].

This distinction is not arbitrary: acute and chronic graft-versus-host-disease appear to involve different immune cell subsets, different cytokine profiles, somewhat different host targets, and respond differently to treatment.

The severity classification is based on skin, liver, and GI involvement. In this classification, GvHD is divided as follows:

Skin:

  • Stage 0: no rash
  • Stage 1: maculopapular rash < 25% of body surface area
  • Stage 2: maculopapular rash 25-50% of body surface area
  • Stage 3: maculopapular rash >50% of body surface area
  • Stage 4: generalized erythema plus bullous formation

Liver:

  • Stage 0: bilirubin < 2 mg/dl
  • Stage 1: bilirubin 2-3 mg/dl
  • Stage 2: bilirubin 3.1-6 mg/dl
  • Stage 3: bilirubin 6.1-15 mg/dl
  • Stage 4: bilirubin >15 mg/dl

GI:

  • Stage 0: < 50cc stool per day or persistent nausea
  • Stage 1: 500-999cc stool per day
  • Stage 2: 1000-1500cc stool per day
  • Stage 3: >1500cc stool per day
  • Stage 4: severe abdominal pain or ileus

The conglomeration of staging gives rise to a grade. The grading system is as follows:

  • Grade 1: skin stage 1-2 with no liver or GI involvement
  • Grade 2: skin stage 3 or liver stage 1 or GI stage 1
  • Grade 3: skin with any stage or liver stage 2-3 or GI stage 2-4
  • Grade 4: skin stage 4 or liver stage 4 or GI with any stage


Transfusion-associated GVHD

This type of GVHD is associated with transfusion of un-irradiated blood to immunocompromised recipients. It can also occur in situations where the blood donor is homozygous and the recipient is heterozygous for an HLA haplotype. It is associated with higher mortality (80-90%) due to involvement of bone marrow lymphoid tissue, however the clinical manifestations are similar to GVHD resulting from bone marrow transplantation. Transfusion-associated GVHD is rare in modern medicine. It is almost entirely preventable by controlled irradiation of blood products to inactivate the white blood cells (including lymphocytes) within.

References

  1. Graft versus Host Disease, from the National Marrow Donor Program
  2. Goker H, Haznedaroglu IC, Chao NJ (2001). "Acute graft-vs-host disease: pathobiology and management". Exp. Hematol. 29 (3): 259–77. PMID 11274753.
  3. Lee SJ, Vogelsang G, Flowers ME (2003). "Chronic graft-versus-host disease". Biol. Blood Marrow Transplant. 9 (4): 215–33. doi:10.1053/bbmt.2003.50026. PMID 12720215.

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