RESUMEN
OBJECTIVE: Acute graft-versus-host-disease (aGVHD) develops in 10-80% of allo-HSCT patients. More than half of all aGVHD cases are refractory to first-line therapy with steroids. We hypothesized that bowel wall thickness at the time of aGVHD diagnosis could be an early sign of steroid-refractory aGVHD with gut involvement. METHOD: Our prospective study included 85 patients with hematological malignancies who had undergone allo-HSCT. We used an inexpensive, widespread and simple method of transabdominal ultrasonography to examine bowel wall thickness in patients suspected to have gut aGVHD. RESULTS: Descending colon wall thickness was significantly greater in patients with gut aGVHD later found to be steroid-refractory than in patients with steroid-sensitive gut aGVHD, with AUC-0.73 (95% CI 0.58-0.87, p = 0.013). We showed that bowel wall thickness could predict the steroid-refractoriness of aGVHD. CONCLUSION: Transabdominal ultrasonography could be used as a marker of steroid-refractory aGVHD with gut involvement after allo-HSCT.