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Allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HCT) and advanced cellular therapies, including chimeric antigen receptor T-cell (CAR-T) therapy, are potentially curative treatments for a wide range of malignant and non-malignant hematologic disorders in both pediatric and adult patients. Despite significant therapeutic advances, these procedures remain associated with substantial morbidity and mortality due to complications such as acute and chronic graft-versus-host disease (GvHD), severe infections, relapse, delayed immune reconstitution, and therapy-related toxicities. Increasing evidence indicates that the gut microbiota (GM) plays a critical role in modulating immune responses and influencing clinical outcomes after HCT. Reduced microbial diversity and domination by pathogenic taxa have been associated with higher rates of GvHD, bloodstream infections, transplant-related mortality, and inferior overall survival in adult populations. Conversely, the presence of beneficial commensal bacteria and microbial metabolites, such as short-chain fatty acids, appears to support epithelial barrier integrity and immune regulation. Emerging data also suggest that microbiota composition may influence the efficacy and toxicity profile of CAR-T therapy. However, most available evidence derives from adult cohorts, and data in pediatric patients remain limited. Children differ from adults in terms of microbiota development, immune maturation, environmental exposures, and treatment history. As a result, microbiota-host interactions in pediatric transplant recipients may follow distinct patterns, and extrapolation from adult studies may be inadequate. Moreover, the mechanisms linking microbiota alterations to transplant-related complications are not fully understood in either population. Antibiotic exposure represents a major determinant of microbiota disruption in the peri-transplant period. Broad-spectrum antibiotics are frequently administered for prophylaxis or treatment of infections, but their use can significantly reduce microbial diversity, promote dysbiosis, and facilitate colonization by multidrug-resistant organisms. These changes may negatively affect immune homeostasis and clinical outcomes. Antimicrobial resistance is an additional concern in immunocompromised patients, emphasizing the importance of antibiotic stewardship strategies. However, the biological impact of antibiotic policies on microbiota composition and transplant outcomes has not been comprehensively characterized, particularly in pediatric settings. This study is designed as a prospective, observational, multi-omic investigation of pediatric and adult patients undergoing allogeneic HCT and advanced cellular therapies. The project aims to integrate longitudinal clinical data with comprehensive molecular profiling of both the gut microbiota and the host immune system. Biological samples, including stool and peripheral blood, will be collected at predefined time points before and after transplantation or cellular therapy. Gut microbiota composition and diversity will be analyzed using sequencing-based approaches, while microbial functional potential will be explored through metagenomic and metabolomic analyses. Host responses will be characterized through transcriptomic profiling, immune cell phenotyping, cytokine assessment, and evaluation of immune reconstitution dynamics. The primary objective is to identify microbiota- and host-derived biomarkers associated with key clinical outcomes, including acute and chronic GvHD, severe infections, antimicrobial resistance patterns, relapse, non-relapse mortality, overall survival, and therapy-related toxicities such as cytokine release syndrome in CAR-T recipients. Secondary objectives include assessing the impact of antibiotic exposure and stewardship strategies on microbiota diversity and function, comparing microbiota trajectories between pediatric and adult patients, and exploring associations between microbiota features and therapeutic response. Advanced bioinformatic and statistical methods will be used to integrate multi-omic datasets with detailed clinical variables, enabling identification of predictive signatures and mechanistic pathways. Age-stratified analyses will be performed to highlight pediatric-specific versus adult-specific patterns of microbiota-immune interaction. By providing a comprehensive and longitudinal characterization of the intestinal ecosystem and host immune responses in transplant and cellular therapy recipients, this study aims to improve understanding of the biological determinants of treatment outcomes. The results may contribute to the development of microbiota-informed risk stratification tools and support future personalized strategies, including optimized antibiotic stewardship and targeted microbiota-modulating interventions, ultimately improving survival and quality of life for patients.
Allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HCT) and advanced cellular therapies, including chimeric antigen receptor T-cell (CAR-T) therapy, are potentially curative treatments for a wide spectrum of malignant and non-malignant hematologic diseases in both pediatric and adult patients. Indications include acute and chronic leukemias, lymphomas, myelodysplastic syndromes, bone marrow failure syndromes, primary immunodeficiencies, and selected inherited disorders. Despite major advances in conditioning regimens, donor selection, graft engineering, and supportive care, these interventions remain associated with significant morbidity and mortality. Acute and chronic graft-versus-host disease (GvHD), severe infectious complications, delayed immune reconstitution, relapse, organ toxicities, and treatment-related adverse events continue to represent major clinical challenges. In the CAR-T setting, additional toxicities such as cytokine release syndrome (CRS), immune effector cell-associated neurotoxicity syndrome (ICANS), prolonged cytopenias, and infections further complicate patient management. Increasing evidence indicates that the gut microbiota plays a central role in modulating immune homeostasis and systemic inflammatory responses in the transplant setting. The intestinal microbiota constitutes a complex and dynamic ecosystem that interacts with the host through metabolic, immunologic, and epithelial pathways. A diverse and balanced microbial community supports intestinal barrier integrity, produces immunomodulatory metabolites such as short-chain fatty acids, and contributes to the regulation of innate and adaptive immune responses. Conversely, disruption of microbial diversity and overgrowth of opportunistic or pathogenic taxa, a condition commonly referred to as dysbiosis, has been associated with epithelial injury, systemic inflammation, and immune dysregulation. Observational studies in adult allogeneic HCT recipients have demonstrated that reduced microbiota diversity and domination by specific bacterial taxa correlate with increased risk of acute GvHD, bloodstream infections, transplant-related mortality, and inferior overall survival. Certain commensal bacteria appear to exert protective effects, potentially through promotion of regulatory T-cell differentiation and maintenance of mucosal barrier function. However, most available data derive from adult cohorts, and pediatric-specific evidence remains limited. Children differ substantially from adults with respect to microbiota development, immune maturation, environmental exposures, nutritional factors, and prior treatments. The intestinal microbiome evolves dynamically across childhood and adolescence, suggesting that microbiota-host interactions in pediatric transplant recipients may follow distinct patterns. Extrapolation from adult data may therefore be inadequate. Emerging research also suggests that the gut microbiota may influence the efficacy and toxicity of CAR-T therapy. Baseline microbiota composition and antibiotic exposure prior to lymphodepletion have been associated with differential CAR-T expansion, response rates, and incidence of inflammatory toxicities. Nonetheless, mechanistic insights remain incomplete, and the interplay between microbial ecology, host immune activation, and treatment outcomes requires comprehensive investigation in both adult and pediatric populations. Antibiotic exposure represents one of the most significant drivers of microbiota disruption during the peri-transplant period. Broad-spectrum antibiotics are frequently administered for prophylaxis or treatment of suspected or documented infections, particularly during neutropenia. While essential for infection control, these agents can markedly reduce microbial diversity, eliminate beneficial commensal organisms, and promote the expansion of resistant pathogens. The emergence of multidrug-resistant organisms poses an additional threat to immunocompromised patients. Several studies have suggested that certain antibiotic classes and cumulative exposure are associated with increased risk of GvHD and mortality, highlighting the importance of antibiotic stewardship. However, the biological impact of antimicrobial prescribing patterns on microbiota composition, antimicrobial resistance genes, and transplant outcomes remains insufficiently characterized, especially in pediatric settings. This study is designed as a prospective, observational, longitudinal investigation integrating multi-omic analyses in pediatric and adult patients undergoing allogeneic HCT or advanced cellular therapies, including CAR-T. The study does not alter standard therapeutic approaches; all treatments, conditioning regimens, graft sources, CAR-T products, and supportive care strategies are administered according to institutional standards and clinical guidelines. The objective is to comprehensively characterize host-microbiota interactions and identify biological signatures associated with clinically relevant outcomes. Participants are enrolled prior to conditioning or lymphodepletion and followed longitudinally through early and late post-treatment phases. Clinical data are systematically collected, including demographic characteristics, underlying diagnosis, prior therapies, conditioning intensity, donor type, antimicrobial exposure, infection episodes, GvHD occurrence and severity, relapse, immune reconstitution parameters, CAR-T-related toxicities, and survival outcomes. Biological samples are obtained at predefined time points, including baseline and multiple post-treatment intervals, as well as at the onset of clinically significant events when feasible. Stool samples are collected to assess gut microbiota composition, diversity, and functional potential using sequencing-based approaches such as 16S rRNA gene sequencing and shotgun metagenomics. These analyses allow characterization of taxonomic profiles, microbial gene content, and antimicrobial resistance determinants. Peripheral blood samples are obtained to evaluate immune cell subsets, cytokine profiles, transcriptomic signatures, and circulating metabolites. Metabolomic analyses explore both host- and microbiota-derived metabolites that may influence immune regulation and epithelial integrity. The primary aim of the study is to identify microbiota- and host-derived biomarkers associated with key outcomes after HCT and CAR-T therapy, including GvHD, severe infections, colonization or infection with multidrug-resistant organisms, relapse, non-relapse mortality, overall survival, and treatment-related toxicities such as CRS and ICANS. Secondary objectives include characterization of longitudinal microbiota dynamics, evaluation of the impact of antibiotic exposure on microbial diversity and resistome profiles, comparison of pediatric and adult microbiota trajectories, and exploration of associations between microbiota features and immune reconstitution or therapeutic response. Advanced bioinformatic and statistical methods are employed to integrate microbiome, transcriptomic, metabolomic, and immunophenotypic data with detailed clinical variables. Multivariate modeling and machine learning approaches may be applied to identify predictive signatures and develop risk stratification models. Age-stratified analyses allow identification of pediatric-specific and adult-specific patterns of host-microbiota interaction. The study is conducted in accordance with ethical principles and applicable regulatory requirements. Written informed consent is obtained from adult participants and from parents or legal guardians of pediatric participants, with assent from minors when appropriate. Biological sampling is coordinated with routine clinical procedures whenever possible to minimize additional burden. All data are de-identified to ensure confidentiality. By integrating comprehensive molecular profiling with longitudinal clinical follow-up, this study aims to generate an in-depth understanding of the biological determinants of outcomes in transplant and cellular therapy recipients. The identification of robust biomarkers and mechanistic pathways may support the development of personalized, microbiota-informed strategies, including optimized antimicrobial stewardship and future microbiota-targeted interventions, ultimately improving survival and reducing treatment-related complications in both pediatric and adult populations.
Age
All ages
Sex
ALL
Healthy Volunteers
No
IRCCS Azienda Ospedaliero-Universitaria di Bologna
Bologna, Bologna, Italy
Start Date
November 21, 2025
Primary Completion Date
July 21, 2028
Completion Date
November 21, 2028
Last Updated
March 11, 2026
260
ESTIMATED participants
Collection of stool, urine, serum, and saliva samples; histological evaluation of biopsy specimens
DIAGNOSTIC_TEST
Lead Sponsor
IRCCS Azienda Ospedaliero-Universitaria di Bologna
Data Source & Attribution
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