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)

The role of Total Body Irradiation (TBI) is well defined in the conditioning regimen for BMT, but in pediatric malignancies there are some particular points of discussion, due to the side effects of irradiation. As alternative methods have been described, as Busulfan based regimens, a critical balance between efficacy and toxicities has to be considered in this subset of patients.
...
PMID:Total body irradiation in the conditioning regimen for hematological malignancies. 176 Jun 31

Bone marrow transplant has proved to be an effective treatment in some hereditary metabolic diseases and, especially, in mucopolysdaccharidosis (MPS). A 9-year-old girl, of consanguineous parents, with MPS Type I, Hurler-Scheie syndrome, received a BMT from her heterozygous, HLA-compatible mother. -L-iduronidase activity in leukocytes and fibroblasts was undetectable and glycosaminoglycans (GAG) excretion in urine was very high. BMT conditioning treatment consisted of Busulfan (16 mg/kg) and Cyclophosphamide (120 mg/kg); clinical course was uneventful. Sixty days post-BMT iduronidase activity in leukocytes was similar to that of the donor and GAG levels were normal at 12 months. Echocardiography showed regression in hypertrophic myocardiopathy. Previously enlarged and vacuole-filled skin fibroblasts became reduced in size and vacuole content. The most notable clinical effects were: improved facial features, increased height, disappearance of visceromegalies, gradual clearing of corneal opacities with improved vision and reduced joint stiffness. It is concluded that the gradual deterioration in patients with MPS-I may be arrested and many clinical features improved by BMT.
...
PMID:[Bone marrow transplantation in mucopolysaccharidosis type I, Hurler-Scheie variety. Metabolic correction and clinical results]. 212 72

Thirty patients with malignant hematological disease underwent allogeneic bone marrow transplantation following Busulphan (Bu) and Cyclophosphamide (Cy). The diseases were chronic myelogenous leukemia, acute lymphoblastic and non lymphoblastic leukemia, myelofibrosis and multiple myeloma in complete remission and in relapse. A sustained disease-free survival (DFS) was achieved in 0/5 acute leukemia patients transplanted in relapse, in 5/7 acute leukemia patients transplanted in remission (600-1550 days) and in 6/9 CML patients transplanted in the chronic phase of the disease (500-950 days). A sustained DFS was also achieved in one 2nd BMT for relapsed CML. The data suggest that the Bu-Cy protocol combines high tumor ablative capability with toxicity comparable to previously described conditioning regimens for allogeneic BMT, particularly in diseases involving a great expansion of the bone marrow.
...
PMID:Allogeneic bone marrow transplantation for hematological malignancies following therapy with high doses of busulphan and cyclophosphamide. 251 Nov 15

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.
...
PMID:Allogeneic bone marrow transplantation for myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS). 269 17

Pharmacokinetics were studied in relation to hepatic side-effects in 20 patients (19 adults aged 18-53 years and one child of 11 years) undergoing BMT after conditioning with 1 mg/kg busulfan (every 6 hours for 16 doses). Busulfan was quantitated in plasma samples at 10 time points within the 6 h dosing interval using HPLC before and after dose numbers 1, 2, 5, 13 and 14. For 13 patients data on all five doses are available; for the remaining seven patients three to four doses were studied. Mean maximum concentrations were 1512 ng/ml; mean trough levels for second and subsequent doses were 615 ng/ml. Maxima (Cmax) tended to be lower and times of maxima (Tmax) were later when busulfan was taken with a meal. Correlation of the area under the concentration versus time curve (AUC0-6h) between different doses was low within patients. In several patients problems with compartmental fitting of concentration data were observed mainly caused by the short dosing interval, which made estimates of T1/2 and model derived AUCs unstable. Three patients experienced hepatic veno-occlusive disease; kinetic parameters were not helpful in describing a particulate risk constellation for this subgroup. In our experience, the role of drug monitoring in this setting needs to be defined more clearly.
...
PMID:Busulfan pharmacokinetics in bone marrow transplant patients: is drug monitoring warranted? 788 9

Twenty-four patients with a variety of malignant diseases (13 lymphoma, 4 myeloma, 1 ALL, 6 solid tumours) were treated with the alkylating agents busulphan and melphalan as a preparative regimen for autologous BMT. Thirteen males and 11 females, aged 27-53 years (median 39.5 years) received oral busulphan 1 mg/kg q6 h on days -6 to -3, followed by i.v. melphalan 140 mg/m2 on day -2 and infusion of cryopreserved haemopoietic cells on day 0. The major toxicity seen was gastrointestinal with nausea, vomiting and diarrhoea in 17 patients and severe mucositis in 22. There was no evidence of cardiotoxicity, nephrotoxicity, haemorrhagic cystitis or clinical signs of hepatic veno-occlusive disease. Twenty-three patients engrafted with the median duration of neutropenia (< 0.05 x 10(9)/l) 10 days (range 5-63 days) and thrombocytopenia (< 50 x 10(9)/l) 43 days (range 5-350 days). Three patients died of transplant-related complications. Of 15 evaluable patients with active disease at BMT, 9 responded and 6 were refractory. Sixteen evaluable patients were in CR after BMT. Seven relapsed, 1 died in remission and 8 remain in CR 12-46 months (median 29 months) later. Of the group of 13 lymphomas, overall and relapse-free actuarial survival at 36 months was 64% and 58%, respectively, while for the entire group of 24 patients these values were 39% and 34%. Busulphan and melphalan is a safe and inexpensive conditioning regimen for autologous BMT with acceptable toxicity and substantial antitumour activity particularly against lymphomas.
...
PMID:Busulphan and melphalan prior to autologous bone marrow transplantation. 827 31

Acute graft-versus-host disease (GVHD) has recently been associated with endothelial cell injury. The potential clinical significance was explored here in an autopsy review. Thirty-seven allogeneic bone marrow recipients were identified in the autopsy files at The Johns Hopkins Hospital with no evidence of systemic infection. Forty-one percent (15/37) of these patients were found to have extensive recent pulmonary hemorrhage at autopsy which was thought to have led to terminal respiratory failure and death. The 37 patients were divided into 2 groups: those with significant acute GVHD (stage 2 or greater) and those without GVHD (stage 0 or 1). Fifty-nine percent (10/17) of the patients with significant acute GVHD died of acute respiratory failure due to recent pulmonary hemorrhage as opposed to 25% (5/20) of those without acute GVHD (P = 0.032, Fisher's exact test). Terminal pulmonary hemorrhage was also associated with preparation for BMT, with 67% (12/18) of those prepared with total body irradiation (TBI) having pulmonary hemorrhage as opposed to 15% (3/19) of those prepared with chemotherapy using Busulphan (P = 0.002). There was no significant difference in posttransplant survival, engraftment, or final platelet count between the patients stratified by GVHD or preparative protocol. The data support a strong association between significant acute GVHD and terminal hemorrhage, as well a possible association between TBI and pulmonary hemorrhage. Analysis of variance demonstrates that GVHD and TBI are independently associated with increased pulmonary hemorrhage (P < 0.01 for GVHD, P < 0.001 for TBI). We propose that GVHD contributes to terminal pulmonary hemorrhage by injuring the endothelium. However, this association could also be a secondary effect, i.e., toxicity from therapy for GVHD, or an abnormality in cytokines or growth factors. The pathogenic relationship between significant GVHD and terminal hemorrhage is discussed briefly.
...
PMID:Pulmonary hemorrhage as a cause of death in allogeneic bone marrow recipients with severe acute graft-versus-host disease. 829 Nov 20

Busulfan pharmacokinetics, specifically area under the concentration curve (AUC), have been correlated with the occurrence of veno-occlusive disease (VOD) following BMT. To evaluate the risk of VOD, we studied 66 patients who received pharmacotherapeutically monitored busulfan regimens in combination with CY, etoposide (VP16) and/or Ara-C in preparation for BMT. These patients received a total of 16 doses of busulfan dosed as 1 mg/kg/dose q 6 h beginning at 09.00 (n = 39), 18.00 (n = 2), 21.00 (n = 1) or 24.00 (n = 24) h. With the first dose, blood samples were obtained at baseline, every 15-30 min for 2 h, then every 1-2 h for 4 h. Blood was analyzed for busulfan concentration by high performance liquid chromatography and AUC calculated by the trapezoidal rule. Seventeen patients (25.8%) were not evaluable for AUC calculation due to slow absorption and/or elimination: 13 of 27 (48.1%) received the first dose between 18.00-24.00 vs four of 39 (10.2%) patients who received the first dose at 09.00 (P < 0.001). Eighteen of 51 (35.3%) evaluable patients had an AUC > 1500 mumol x min/l; 10 of whom received doses reduced proportionally to achieve an AUC = 1200 mumol x min/l starting with the 10th to 15th dose. Six of 18 (33.3%) patients with an initial AUC > 1500 mumol x min/l developed VOD vs one of 33 (3.0%) patients with an initial AUC < 1500 mumol x min/l (relative risk = 11.1; P = 0.0056). Other pharmacokinetic parameters, age, gender, type of BMT, previous therapy or pre-transplant liver function tests were not predictive of VOD. A higher incidence of VOD occurred in patients receiving BUCY (4 of 10) compared to those receiving BUCYAra-C (1 of 18) or BUCYVP16 (7 of 38), which could not be attributed to increased busulfan exposure in the BUCY patients. Routine pharmacotherapeutic monitoring of busulfan is recommended with further study to evaluate the impact of earlier and greater overall dose reduction in patients with high initial busulfan exposures.
...
PMID:Association of busulfan area under the curve with veno-occlusive disease following BMT. 864 Jan 71

From 1983 to 1994 two types of trials were performed. Between 1983 and 1987 a modified VAPA protocol (post-remission therapy with intensive sequential blocks for 12-16 months) was given to 40 patients from two institutions. CR was attained in 75% and 5-year EFS was 35%. In 1988 a post-remission protocol based on intensification chemotherapy (two high-dose Ara C treatments combined with mitoxantrone in the first and amsacrine in the second) followed by BMT was initiated. Remission induction was DAE combination (1 or 2). Patients in CR or PR with HLA-compatible donor received an allogeneic transplant (al-BMT) and those without an autologous transplant (ABMT) with "purged" marrow. Pre-BMT therapy was fractionated TBI and CYCLO in patients over 3 years and Busulfan + CYCLO + VP-16 in those under 3. Between April '88 and December '94, 51 patients (aged 3 months to 15 years) were enrolled. 80% attained CR, 14% were failures or partial responses and 6% died before the 30th day. During the intensification phase, 5 patients attained CR and one relapsed and died. 47 patients (45 in CR and 2 in PR) proceeded to the BMT phase. 16 patients (14 in CR and 2 in PR) received al-BMT and 31 (all in CR) ABMT. Both group characteristics were comparable.
...
PMID:Allogeneic and autologous bone marrow transplantation in AML in first remission. The Spanish experience. 893

This report summarizes indications and results of autologous bone marrow transplantation (ABMT) performed in childhood acute myeloid leukemia (AML) in Italy since 1984. A total of 158 patients have been reported from 12 teams to the AIEOP-BMT Registry: 110 have been autografted in first complete remission (CR) and 48 in second remission. Several conditioning regimens have been utilized, mainly consisting of BAVC (an original polichemotherapy schedule, BCNU, mAMSA, VP-16 and Ara-C) (63 cases) and of total body irradiation (TBI) plus Melphalan (33 cases): other 28 patients received different TBI-including regimens, and 34 received various chemotherapy regimens (Busulfan plus cyclophosphamide +/- VP-16, Busulfan plus Melphalan, Melphalan alone). Projected event-free survival (EFS) for patients autografted in first CR is 41.4% (S.E. 5.5%) at 7 years, with a total of 53 patients in continuous CR. EFS is better in patients receiving a TBI-including regimen: 78.8% versus 27.2% (p = 0.0001). In particular, results obtained in a subgroup of 21 cases receiving TBI + melphalan and purged marrow are particularly encouraging, with a EFS > 85% projected a 7 years. The overall EFS in second CR is 41.5% at 7 years, and no difference have been observed after a TBI-including regimen or after a chemotherapy regimen, being EFS 43.1% and 39.3% for these 2 groups respectively. A total of 11 transplant-related deaths occurred, with 5 patients (4.5%) dead in first CR and 6 (12%) dead in second CR within 100 days from transplant. From these data, ABMT is confirmed to represent an effective treatment for AML after first relapse, while the encouraging results obtained in first CR with TBI-including regimens should be confirmed with a longer follow up and a larger number of patients.
...
PMID:Autologous bone marrow transplantation in children with acute myeloblastic leukemia: report from the Italian National Pediatric Registry (AIEOP-BMT). 893 1


1 2 Next >>