Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:2.1.1.69 (BMT)
2,655 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A 36-year-old man was diagnosed as having RAEB in 1986, and required blood transfusion regularly because of severe anemia. He received the first bone marrow transplantation following total-body irradiation and etoposide infusion in October 1987. He was found to be relapsed into RAEB on 106th day after BMT. And the second BMT was planned. According to the conditioning regimen of Tutschka, et al, we administrated busulfan and cyclophosphamide before re-transplantation. On 26th day after BMT, the WBC count exceeded 1,000/microliters and anemia was improved, while thrombocytopenia persisted until 50th day. Normal hematopoiesis in the bone marrow was confirmed on the 29th day. No severe side effect except for a little fevering and bleeding was found during the clinical course. Unfortunately he died of pneumonia following graft versus host disease on the 166th day after re-BMT. This new conditioning regimen is considered to be a choice for the high risk patients on re-transplantation.
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PMID:[Bone marrow re-transplantation following a busulfan and cyclophosphamide regimen]. 221 94

In the literature 63 patients with myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS) are reported who were treated with syngeneic or allogeneic bone marrow transplantation. 62 patients were prepared for BMT with TBI containing regimens or Busulfan/Cyclophosphamide. GvHD prophylaxis was heterogenous. 33/63 patients are alive and well between 4 and 132 months after BMT. 23/63 patients died due to GvHD (n = 6), interstitial pneumonitis (n = 6), other infections (n = 4), toxicity of the preparative regimen (n = 5) or graft failure (n = 2). 9/63 patients relapsed between 2 and 98 (in median 6) months after BMT. There seems to be a correlation between the subtype of the MDS and the relapse rate: only 1/18 patients with RA/RARS relapsed compared to 7/42 patients with RAEB/RAEB-T. These results indicate that marrow transplantation can induce long term survival and may result in cure of patients with MDS.
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PMID:Allogeneic bone marrow transplantation for myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS). 269 17

Myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS) represent an acquired group of clonal disorders of the pleuripotent stem cells, resulting in progressive life-threatening cytopenias or transformation into acute leukemias. A major issue of using alloBMT in MDS is the criteria used for patient selection. Therapeutic trials of lesser intensity such as differentiating agents, and cytokines could be the preferable choice for patients with good prognostic features. On the other hand, patients with poor prognostic features may urgently need to establish a normal hematopoiesis through allogeneic bone marrow transplantation (alloBMT). Important prognostic indicators in MDS include FAB classification, presence of abnormal localization of immature precursors, degree of cytopenias and cytogenetic abnormalities. We used a novel preparative regimen--"BAC" consisting of the consecutive administration of 1 mg/kg of busulfan every 6 hours for 16 doses followed by 2 g/M2 of cytosine arabinoside (ara-C) given every 12 hours for four doses, and finally 60 mg/kg of cyclophosphamide daily for 2 days. Thirty two patients transplanted had a median age of 33 years. Nine of the patients had either RA or RARS, 21 had RAEB or RAEB-T and 2 were unclassified MDS. Twenty two of our patients had chromosomal abnormalities while 10 had a normal karyotype analysis. Nine of the 32 patients had documented leukemic transformation and received induction therapy prior to BMT. The median time from diagnosis to BMT was 5.6 months, ranging from 1.3 to 30.2 months. Nineteen out of 32 patients are alive without disease, with a median follow up of 24 months. The actuarial event-free survival for the entire group is 52%. Two patients have relapsed with an actuarial relapse rate of 12%. Only significant favorable prognostic indicator for the event-free survival was in the recipient of a genotypically matched graft (76%) compared to recipients of a non-genotypic graft (23%) (p = 0.02). "BAC" is a unique preparative regimen for alloBMT in MDS with excellent results.
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PMID:Allogeneic bone marrow transplantation in patients with myelodysplastic syndromes. 781 96

We report the case of a 14-year-old boy with myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS/RAEB) which developed following Fanconi anemia. The patient received BMT from an HLA-identical sister. Based on the in vitro CY-sensitivity test, 100 mg/kg of CY was administered for conditioning combined with 6 Gy TBI. Mucosal symptoms such as stomatitis, diarrhea and hematuria were severe, but manageable, and engraftment was successful. The patient has maintained normal trilineage hematopoiesis with > 90% Karnofsky score for 30 months with disappearance of a clonal chromosomal abnormality (47,XY, +i(lq)) which was detected before BMT.
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PMID:Successful allogeneic bone marrow transplantation in a case with myelodysplastic syndrome which developed following Fanconi anemia. 852 82

A 49-year-old man with myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS, RAEB in T) who relapsed following allogeneic bone marrow transplantation (allo BMT) was treated with infusions of donor buffy coat leukocytes. He sustained hematologic and cytogenetic remission, but severe graft-versus-host disease (GVHD) developed for which cyclosporin A and prednisolone were required. This therapeutic approach appears to be valuable for relapsed MDS following allo BMT as well as for chronic myelogenous leukemia (CML).
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PMID:Donor buffy coat infusions for a patient with myelodysplastic syndrome who relapsed following allogeneic bone marrow transplantation. 853 26

A 36-year-old woman with RAEB-t and severe bone marrow fibrosis undergoing autologous BMT, developed a histologically documented GVHD-like skin rash. Thereafter, autoimmune thyroiditis, autoimmune thrombocytopenic purpura and autoimmune hemolytic anemia and a lupus anti-coagulant (LAC) were diagnosed. The patient is still alive, symptom-free and in first complete remission (CR); however, all of the autoantibodies are still detectable, with the exception being the anti-erythrocyte antibody. The most outstanding feature of the present case is the polymorphism of the autoimmune events, in the absence of a coexisting systemic autoimmune disease. This patient has achieved long-term disease-free survival (DFS) in first CR despite high-risk MDS and the repeated immunosuppressant therapy required because of the complications described above; a GVL reaction somewhat similar to the autoimmune events may have contributed towards maintaining disease control.
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PMID:Multiple autoimmune events after autologous bone marrow transplantation. 915 54

The Chronic Leukemia Working Party of the EBMT has collected data on 118 patients of median age 24 years (range 0.3 to 53 years) who underwent an allogeneic bone marrow transplantation from unrelated donors for treatment of MDS or secondary AML (RA/RARS, n = 24; RAEB, n = 26; RAEB-t, n = 34; CMML, n = 12; sAML, n = 22) between 1986 and 1996. The data were reported by 49 EBMT centers. Thirty-four of 118 patients are alive, relapse was the cause of death in 19 of 84 patients and the remaining patients died of transplant-related mortality. For the whole group the actuarial probability of survival at 2 years is 28%, disease-free survival 28%, relapse risk 35% and transplant-related mortality is 58%. The transplant-related mortality is significantly influenced by the age of the recipient (<18 years 40%, 18-35 years 61%, >35 years 81%). The relapse rate after BMT is influenced by FAB classification of the disease at BMT. Patients with a low blast count (RA, RAEB) have a lower probability of relapse (13%, 15%) compared to patients with RAEB-t or sAML (29%, 45%). Furthermore, we found evidence of a graft-versus-leukemia effect in MDS/sAML. Patients with acute GVHD, grade II-IV, had a probability of relapse of 26% vs 42% in patients with no acute GVHD or grade I only. Allogeneic transplantation with an HLA-matched, unrelated donor may be offered to younger patients (age <35 years) with poor risk myelodysplasia or secondary AML.
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PMID:Unrelated bone marrow transplantation in patients with myelodysplastic syndromes and secondary acute myeloid leukemia: an EBMT survey. European Blood and Marrow Transplantation Group. 967 54

Fourty children with MDS treated in seven centres of The Polish Children's Leukemia Lymphoma Study Group in period 1975-1998y were included to the study. In 16 children RAEB-T, in 2 CMML in 10 RA and in 12 RAEB were diagnosed. Our and literature data showed that BMT is the best therapy for children with MDS. For children, who don't have a donor for BMT. Roacutan therapy seems to be the most effective.
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PMID:[Treatment outcome for myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS) obtained by the Polish Children's Leukemia/Lymphoma Study Group]. 968 18

Donor leukocyte infusions (DLI) from the original marrow donor have been shown to induce remission in patients with relapse after BMT. We analyzed factors that were associated with remission. Twenty-six patients with a relapse after T cell depleted BMT received DLI. The following pre-DLI factors were analyzed: sex and age of the patients and donors, GVHD after BMT, indication for DLI, percentage of donor T lymphocytes in the patient at the time of DLI, interval between relapse and DLI, and number of T lymphocytes infused. Remission was achieved in 11 of 15 patients (73%) treated for relapsed CML and in one of 11 patients (9%) treated for relapsed AML, ALL or RAEB-t (P = .002). Two of 13 patients (15%) with < or =40% of T lymphocytes from donor origin attained remission compared with 10 of 13 patients (77%) with >40% (P = .002). Two of 13 patients (15%) with an interval of < or =18 months between BMT and first DLI entered remission compared with 10 of 13 patients (77%) with an interval of >18 months (P = .002). Multivariate analysis demonstrated that indication for DLI (CML versus AML/ALL and RAEB-t) and the percentage T lymphocytes from donor origin (< or =40 versus >40) were significantly correlated with remission (P = .03). The occurrence of GVHD post DLI was highly associated with achievement of remission (P = .0001). DLI res ults in remission in a high percentage of patients with relapsed CML after BMT. The percentage of T lymphocytes from donor origin still present in the patient at the time of DLI is highly correlated with achievement of remission.
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PMID:In relapsed patients after lymphocyte depleted bone marrow transplantation the percentage of donor T lymphocytes correlates well with the outcome of donor leukocyte infusion. 1003 29

The occurrence of Langerhans cell histiocytosis (LCH) and acute leukemia in one individual has rarely been observed. Despite few exceptions, two distinct patterns of association appear evident: acute lymphoblastic leukemia preceding LCH and LCH preceding acute nonlymphoblastic leukemia (ANLL). The latency of ANLL after the diagnosis of LCH is suggestive of a therapy-related process. This report describes two new cases in whom ANLL was diagnosed 7 years 8 months and 5 years 8 months after the start of initial treatment of disseminated recurrent LCH. Morphology showed blasts from FAB-type M4/M5 in the first patient, who died due to progression of leukemia. The second patient showed myelodysplastic syndrome (refractory anemia with excess of blasts in transformation; RAEB-t) and is now in remission from leukemia 3 years 11 months after allogeneic bone marrow transplantation. The review of a total of 26 patients with ANLL after LCH suggests that the disease has a poor prognosis and allogeneic BMT seems to be the treatment of choice.
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PMID:Occurrence of acute nonlymphoblastic leukemia in two girls after treatment of recurrent, disseminated Langerhans cell histiocytosis. 1032 16


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