Table 2.
Referencea | Population | Variable(s) | Key findings |
---|---|---|---|
Bona et al28 | Age ≤18 years; all diagnoses; first allogeneic HCT recipients reported to CIBMTR; 2006-2015 | SES | In children with malignant disease, high neighborhood poverty level associated with higher NRM and Medicaid insurance status associated with higher NRM and inferior OS (vs private insurance); no association between neighborhood poverty and HCT outcomes for nonmalignant disease |
Hong et al8 | Age ≥18 years; all diagnoses; first allogeneic HCT recipients reported to CIBMTR; 2014-2016 | Several (county-level indicators of community health) | Patients residing in counties with worse community health status had inferior OS; among patients with hematologic malignancy, worse community health status was associated with inferior OS and higher risks of NRM |
Madbouly et al29 | All ages; all diagnoses; allogeneic HCT using 10/10 allele matched MUD reported to CIBMTR; 1995– 2001 | Race/ethnicity (ancestry) | Higher recipient-donor African genetic admixture associated with lower OS and DFS and higher NRM |
Majhail et al16 | Adult HCT centers; all diagnoses; allogeneic HCT reported to CIBMTR; 2008-2010 and 2012– 2014 | Center volume | Higher 100-day and 1-year OS in high-volume (>40 allogeneic HCT/year) vs low-volume centers; presence of survivorship program associated with higher 1-year OS |
Khera et al30 | Adult; all diagnoses; first allogeneic HCT recipients at single center; 2000-2010 | Geography (distance from HCT center) | No association of distance and OS, NRM, or relapse; trend toward higher NRM with increased distance in nonmyeloablative HCT recipients |
Bhatt et al31 | All ages; hematologic malignancy; single-center study of first auto and allogeneic HCT recipients; 2007-2011 | Time to insurance approval | Time to insurance approval for HCT varied between private and public payers but was not associated with OS |
Table shows representative studies in US populations published since 2015.
DFS, disease-free survival; NRM, nonrelapse mortality; OS, overall survival.