The Allogeneic Timeline
Time from transplant is the single most useful diagnostic filter.
| Phase | Time | Key Risks |
|---|---|---|
| Pre-Engraftment | Days 0–30 | Mucositis, Bacterial Sepsis, Haemorrhagic Cystitis, VOD/SOS |
| Early Post-Tx | Days 30–100 | Acute GVHD, CMV/EBV, Engraftment Syndrome, TA-TMA |
| Late Phase | Days >100 | Chronic GVHD, Encapsulated bacteria, VZV, Secondary Malignancy |
infectious complications
clinical pearl
Fever is often absent due to high-dose corticosteroids. Maintain low threshold for septic workup in “unwell” patients.
- Bacterial:
- Mucositis: Portal for Gram-positive (Strep. viridans) and anaerobes.
- Late Phase: Hypogammaglobulinemia/functional asplenia Strep. pneumo risk.
- Viral:
- CMV: Major cause of pneumonitis/colitis.
- Prophylaxis: Letermovir (Standard of care for seropositive recipients).
- Treatment: Ganciclovir or Valganciclovir.
- BK Virus: Causes Haemorrhagic Cystitis (dysuria, haematuria). Differentiate from cyclophosphamide toxicity (Mesna prevention).
- VZV: Reactivation common late. Prophylaxis required >1 year.
- CMV: Major cause of pneumonitis/colitis.
- Fungal/PJP:
- PJP: Cotrimoxazole required for ≥6 months or while on immunosuppression.
- Invasive Fungal: Fluconazole/Posaconazole prophylaxis during neutropenia/GVHD.
non-infectious acute complications
1. vascular & endothelial
- VOD/SOS (Veno-Occlusive Disease):
- Triad: RUQ pain + Weight gain (fluid retention) + Jaundice (hyperbilirubinaemia).
- Rx: Defibrotide (strict funding criteria).
- TA-TMA (Transplant-Associated Thrombotic Microangiopathy):
- Presentation: Coombs-neg haemolysis, schistocytes, thrombocytopenia, renal failure, HTN.
- Diagnosis: Normal ADAMTS13 (vs TTP). Screen if 3 features present.
- Trigger: CNI toxicity, viral reactivation.
- Engraftment Syndrome:
- Timing: Within 4 days of neutrophil recovery (typ. Day +10 to +20).
- Clinical: Non-infectious fever + rash + pulmonary oedema (“capillary leak”).
- Rx: Pulse steroids.
2. organ toxicities
- Cardiovascular:
- Arrhythmias: AFib/Flutter common.
- Cardiomyopathy: High-dose Cyclophosphamide is cardiotoxic (acute HF, haemorrhagic myocarditis).
- Neuro (CNI Toxicity):
- Cyclosporine/Tacrolimus cause PRES, tremors, seizures.
- Pearl: Hypomagnesaemia drastically lowers seizure threshold—aggressive Mg replacement required.
graft-vs-host disease (gvhd)
exam trap
Distinguishing Acute vs Chronic is based on clinical features, not the rigid “Day 100” cutoff.
acute gvhd
- Patho: Donor T-cells attack host tissues.
- Classic Triad:
- Skin: Maculopapular “sunburn” rash (acral/palmar/plantar).
- Gut: High volume secretory diarrhoea (green/mucoid, often >1L/day).
- Liver: Cholestatic jaundice (High ALP/Bili).
- Management:
- Systemic: Methylprednisolone 1–2 mg/kg IV.
- Refractory: Ruxolitinib (JAK1/2 inhibitor).
chronic gvhd
- Patho: Fibrotic/Autoimmune phenotype.
- Presentation: Scleroderma-like skin, Bronchiolitis Obliterans (air trapping), Sicca (dry eyes/mouth).
- Grading: Mild/Moderate/Severe based on number of organs and functional impairment.
- Management: Steroids + CNI taper + supportive care.
survivorship & maintenance
- Vaccination: Immune “amnesia”. Restart inactivated vaccines at 6–12 months. Live vaccines (MMR/Varicella) delayed ≥24 months (and only if no active GVHD).
- Metabolic: Monitor for metabolic syndrome (HTN, DM, Dyslipidaemia).
- Malignancy: Increased risk of secondary solid tumours (skin, oral, thyroid) and MDS/AML.