- Ciurea, Stefan O;
- Bittencourt, Maria Cecilia Borges;
- Milton, Denái R;
- Cao, Kai;
- Kongtim, Piyanuch;
- Rondon, Gabriela;
- Chen, Julianne;
- Konopleva, Marina;
- Perez, Jorge M Ramos;
- Shazly, Mohammed F El;
- Aljadayeh, Majdi;
- Alvarez, Michele;
- Im, Jin;
- Al-Atrash, Gheath;
- Mehta, Rohtesh;
- Popat, Uday;
- Bashir, Qaiser;
- Oran, Betul;
- Hosing, Chitra M;
- Khouri, Issa F;
- Kebriaei, Partow;
- Champlin, Richard E
Donor availability for allogeneic transplantation remains an important factor in determining outcomes of a successful transplant. We examined outcomes of 242 patients treated over 3 years who had a matched unrelated donor (MUD) search at our institution. One hundred sixty patients (66%) had a 10 of 10 MUD identified, and 85 (53%) proceeded to MUD transplantation. White patients and those with common haplotypes were more likely to have a MUD identified (odds ratio [OR], 7.4 [P < .0001]; OR, 41.6 [P < .0001]), and were more likely to proceed to transplantation with a MUD (OR, 11.2 [P < .0001]; OR, 85.1 [P = .002]). In addition, patients who were newly diagnosed/in remission at the time of MUD search had a higher probability of receiving a transplant (OR, 2.01 [P = .013]) and better progression-free survival (PFS; P < .0001). In multivariate analysis for patients who received a transplant, donor type did not influence PFS at 3 years, which was 40% for MUD and 57% for haploidentical transplants, respectively (hazard ratio, 1.2 [P = .50]). In conclusion, race, haplotype frequency, and disease status at the time of MUD search influence the probability of identifying a MUD and receiving a transplant. Patients with a low likelihood of receiving a MUD transplant may proceed to a haploidentical transplant as soon as indicated, as this approach does not appear to compromise transplant outcomes.