Background: Allogeneic donor natural killer (NK)-cell infusion (NK-DLI) is a promising immunotherapy for patients with hematologic disorders.
Case report: This report describes the case of a patient who received a single haploidentical NK-DLI for a relapse of acute myeloid leukemia (AML) after haploidentical hematopoietic stem cell transplantation. He underwent a cytoreductive, immunosuppressive regimen before NK-DLI and received high-dose interleukin-2 in vivo for 8 weeks afterward.
Results: No major adverse effect was observed. Prospective phenotypic and functional studies of the NK cells showed major expansion of infused NK cells and, more importantly, of the alloreactive KIR2DL1+KIR2DL2/DL3-NKG2A- subset, which reached 117×10(6) cells/L on Day +14 after NK-DLI, the greatest expansion of infused alloreactive NK cells reported so far. Infused NK cells conserved their lytic capacities against K562 target cells and primary AML-mismatched blasts.
Conclusion: We review the literature to clarify these data and to detail the indications for allogeneic NK-DLI, the criteria for determining the most suitable donor, the types of conditioning regimens, and the procedures for selecting and activating NK cells.
© 2011 American Association of Blood Banks.