The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

‘PIONEER’ GETS TRANSPLANT TO TREAT HER SICKLE CELL

Georgia hospitals participat­e in latest marrow transplant­s.

- By Jill Vejnoska jvejnoska@ajc.com

At 33, Alexis Jones-Heggs has known a life filled with “regular crises.”

Times when she was unable to walk or sit up straight or even use her hands to eat. High school graduation, when she’d just gotten out of the hospital and says she “limped all the way across the stage.” Becoming pregnant with her daughter, when some family members feared mightily for her own health.

Yet now, Jones-Heggs hopes, she’s setting a powerful example for people like her with sickle cell disease.

“I feel sort of like a pioneer,” the soft-spoken Jones-Heggs said by phone from Augusta University Health in January, several weeks after undergoing a bone marrow transplant from her sister as a possible cure for the inherited red blood cell disease. “I feel like I’ve opened the door for a lot more people to do this.”

A resident of little Mount Vernon in southeast Georgia, JonesHeggs is one of the first adults in the country to get a transplant as part of a groundbrea­king national clinical trial that also has a major presence in metro Atlanta. Forty sites are participat­ing in the first of its kind National Institutes of Health-funded trial, including the Aflac Cancer and Blood Disorders Center of Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta and Emory University, the Winship Cancer Institute of Emory University, and the Medical College of Georgia and Augusta University Health.

People with sickle cell disease have abnormal hemoglobin, the protein in red blood cells that carries oxygen throughout the body. This inadequate distributi­on of oxygen causes frequent “pain crises” — sudden and severe onsets of pain in patients — and over time, can lead to organ and bone damage, clinical strokes and premature death.

Approximat­ely 100,000 Americans have sickle cell disease, according to the NIH’s National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute. Most are “of African ancestry or identify themselves as black,” it says, although people from Hispanic, southern European, Middle Eastern, or Asian Indian background­s also have it. About 1 in every 365 black children is born with sickle cell disease, NHLBI

says.

During the bone marrow transplant­ation (BMT) procedure, which has proved successful with younger patients, the recipient undergoes chemothera­py to destroy their own bone marrow and ward off rejection. That’s then replaced intravenou­sly with closely matched marrow from a healthy donor.

“When their (the donor’s) marrow takes over, it will produce red blood cells without sickle cell disease,” said Dr. Jeremy Mark A. Pantin, the MCG Department of Medicine hematologi­st/oncologist who performed JonesHeggs’ transfer. “It’s the only cure right now.”

The trial will enroll 200 patients between the ages of 15 and 40. About 60 will get a transplant, ideally from a closely matched sibling. The remaining participan­ts for whom a suitable donor can’t be identified will go into a comparison group and receive the current standard of care for two years.

The trial seeks to definitive­ly determine if bone marrow transplant­ation leads to better outcomes for older sickle cell patients, says the Atlanta doctor who is the principal investigat­or for the study’s clinical coordinati­ng center.

“There’s a lot of pain, organ damage and hospitaliz­ations associated with this disease,” said Dr. Lakshmanan Krishnamur­ti, director of bone marrow transplant and chair of blood and marrow transplant at the Aflac Cancer & Blood Disorders Center of Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta and Emory University. “There have been a lot of improvemen­ts in care, but the needle has not really moved that far in terms of survival of adult patients in particular.”

A patient cannot be determined as “cured” until one year post-BMT. The national trial runs through 2020, making any discussion of outcomes premature at this point.

“We are still in the early stages of the study, and it is too early to tell how many patients will benefit,” Krishnamur­ti said.

Sickle cell disease is a problem with particular resonance in Georgia. There were 7,992 people with it here in 2016, according to the Sickle Cell Foundation of Georgia. Krishnamur­ti said Atlanta likely has the largest number of sickle cell patients in the country. Indeed, the Aflac Cancer & Blood Disorders Center of Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta and Emory University is home to the country’s largest pediatric sickle cell disease program, caring for over 1,900 children and young adults.

For more than two decades, bone marrow transplant­ation has more commonly been performed on children, who tend to have suffered less organ damage and other sickle cell complicati­ons, Pantin said. Their cure rate is so impressive — 92 percent worldwide for matched sibling donor transplant­s, CHOA’s Krishnamur­ti said — that questions about the possible implicatio­ns for older patients logically seemed to follow.

“We know now that if you have a really good match, you can cure children with sickle cell disease at a high rate,” Krishnamur­ti said. “So how about if you are able to replicate this for adults?”

It’s a possibilit­y JonesHeggs has been pondering for some time. In 2012, Amber Jones, the only one of her four siblings who also had sickle cell disease, died at age 19. Then, two years ago, a teenage cousin with sickle cell underwent a transplant, and “her whole demeanor has changed now,” JonesHeggs said.

Still, there was an even more compelling reason she kept asking her doctors “why not me?”: Jocelyn, her 12-year-old daughter. She doesn’t have sickle cell.

“I don’t want her to not have me around,” said JonesHeggs, who’s divorced. “This isn’t easy, and there are days when I think, was it really worth it? But my sister and so many friends have died, so I want to be here for my daughter.”

The procedure isn’t without risks. One potential major complicati­on is graft-versus-host disease, in which the donor’s immune cells mistakenly attack the patient’s own cells and organs and can be life-threatenin­g in some cases. Other risks include severe infections and the possibilit­y of infertilit­y for some patients who receive chemothera­py. Even after transplant recipients are released from the hospital, weeks and months of follow-up visits loom.

“A transplant takes a lot out of life,” said Pantin, who has three more patients being screened for inclusion in the trial (if suitable donor matches aren’t found, they’ll likely become part of the comparison group). “It can take months, even up to a year to get back on your feet.”

Jones-Heggs said most ill effects she experience­d from the procedure were largely related to chemothera­py: Her hair fell out, and she developed painful ulcers on the roof of her mouth, lips, tongue and gums. She got out of the hospital about two weeks after her transplant in mid-December and has follow-up visits twice a week at the Medical College of Georgia and Augusta University Health.

Jones-Heggs said recently she “feels good.” It’s a long process, but she’s hopeful.

“I hope that it completely cures this for me,” JonesHeggs said, “and I hope that this will help make it a program that nobody’s denied who wants it.”

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D BY PHIL JONES / AUGUSTA UNIVERSITY ?? Dr. Jeremy Mark A. Pantin examines Alexis Jones-Heggs during a follow-up visit at Augusta University Health. Jones-Heggs is one of the first adults to receive a bone marrow transplant as part of a National Institutes of Health-funded trial of a...
CONTRIBUTE­D BY PHIL JONES / AUGUSTA UNIVERSITY Dr. Jeremy Mark A. Pantin examines Alexis Jones-Heggs during a follow-up visit at Augusta University Health. Jones-Heggs is one of the first adults to receive a bone marrow transplant as part of a National Institutes of Health-funded trial of a...
 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D BY ALEXIS JONES-HEGGS ?? Alexis JonesHeggs, who has sickle cell disease, recently underwent a bone marrow transplant.
CONTRIBUTE­D BY ALEXIS JONES-HEGGS Alexis JonesHeggs, who has sickle cell disease, recently underwent a bone marrow transplant.

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