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 use of recombinant human granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (rhGM-CSF) as an adjunct to autologous bone marrow transplantation (ABMT) or peripheral blood progenitor cell (PBPC) transplantation was evaluated in 59 lymphoma patients. Patients were divided into three groups. In group I (n = 21) patients received rhGM-CSF (5 micrograms/kg daily) at the time of PBPC collection and during the recovery phase post-infusion. In group II (n = 12) patients received rhGM-CSF as an adjunct to ABMT. In group III (n = 26) they were grafted with bone marrow without rhGM-CSF. Administration of rhGM-CSF (groups I and II) significantly reduced the time to myeloid engraftment, the number of febrile days and the median duration of antibiotics administration and of hospital stay when compared with the group in which patients did not receive rhGM-CSF. The only difference between ABMT and PBPC, given with rhGM-CSF support, was observed in the duration of hospitalization (group I > group II, P < 0.05). These data show that rhGM-CSF is highly effective in reducing the duration of aplasia following BMT and PBPC transfusion, and there appears to be little difference in efficacy between these techniques, provided that patients also receive rhGM-CSF.
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PMID:Granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor accelerates hematopoietic recovery after autologous bone marrow or peripheral blood progenitor cell transplantation and high-dose chemotherapy for lymphoma. 886 37

Treatment options for acute leukemia relapsing after allogeneic BMT include conventional chemotherapy or a second transplant; however, results are rather discouraging, the first option being associated with poor survival and the second with a high mortality rate. More recently, donor leukocyte infusion (DLI) from the original donor has been used for relapsed patients in an attempt to induce a graft-versus-leukemia (GVL) effect. This procedure is partially devoid of the toxicity inherent to a second BMT. At our Institution, a 36-year-old patient with biphenotypic AML in second complete remission after relapse following allogeneic BMT was treated with peripheral blood stem cell (PBSC)-enriched donor leukocytes, obtained after in vivo priming with rhG-CSF. The patient experienced extensive cGVHD but developed a testicular relapse while in full hematologic remission. After irradiation of the sanctuary site he remains free of disease, still with chronic GVHD, 21 months after bone marrow relapse. This case suggests that immunologically privileged sites are inaccessible to GVHD/GVL effect. This should be considered when planning salvage transplants procedures in patients at risk for extramedullary involvement.
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PMID:Testicular relapse of AML during chronic graft-versus-host disease induced by donor leukocyte infusion. 887 Mar 79

In a double-blind, randomized study performed between 1988 and 1990, 40 patients undergoing allogeneic BMT from HLA-identical siblings for hematologic malignancies received 8 mg/kg/d rHuGM-CSF (molgramostim, n = 20) for 14 days. The median neutrophil count on day 14 was significantly higher in the GM-CSF group (1.90 vs 0.46 yen 10(9)/L, P < .0001). The incidence of acute GVHD and transplant-related mortality were comparable. Only two deaths occurred after 6 months; one due to pulmonary fibrosis in the GM-CSF group on day 1591, and one due to relapse on day 1590 in the placebo group. The Karnofsky score of the 10 survivors, 3 in the placebo group and 7 in the GM-CSF group, is 90-100% (median 100%), and none has chronic GVHD requiring therapy. There was no evidence of increased relapse in the GM-CSF group with only two relapses occurring; both in the placebo group. With a follow-up of 4.5-6.8 years (median 5.5 years), these patients are amongst the longest surviving patients to have received a recombinant growth factor post-allograft. We conclude that the administration of GM-CSF after allogeneic BMT does not appear to be associated with an increased incidence of chronic GVHD or relapse, or of other adverse effects such as the development of myelodysplasia.
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PMID:Long-term safety of GM-CSF (molgramostim) administration after allogeneic bone marrow transplantation for hematologic malignancies: five-year follow-up of a double-blind randomized placebo-controlled study. 915 59

To evaluate the chimeric status of mononuclear cells in the CSF after allogeneic BMT, cells were analyzed by FISH using satellite DNA probes for human X and Y chromosomes. CSF cells were obtained from five pediatric ALL patients who received BMT from sex-mismatched donors. All patients received TBI-containing conditioning regimens. We found that CSF cells showed complete donor type in 19-97 days after BMT, when complete donor type hematopoiesis was observed. The rapid entry of the donor leukocytes into the brain may exert beneficial effects to eradicate the residual CNS leukemic cells and prevent a CNS relapse in ALL patients after BMT.
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PMID:Chimerism analysis on mononuclear cells in the CSF after allogeneic bone marrow transplantation. 931 85

We previously suggested that using a combined conditioning regimen including rhG-CSF with allogeneic BMT in refractory AML and CML in blast crisis might reduce the rate of relapse and improve disease-free survival, without any major side effects. In this study, we used the same protocol for 10 AML patients in complete remission (CR) and 6 CML patients in the chronic phase (CP). We compared disease-free survival as well as toxic side effects of the regimen with 6 AML patients in CR and 6 CML patients in CP treated with chemoradiotherapy without G-CSF. The conditioning regimen consisted of TBI and high-dose AraC. RhG-CSF was infused continuously at a dose of 5 microg/kg/day, starting 24 hr before the initial dose of total body irradiation (TBI) until the end of AraC therapy. In all 28 cases, there were no early stage deaths due to regimen-related toxicity (RRT). None of the 10 AML cases treated with the G-CSF combined regime relapsed. In 6 AML cases treated conventionally without G-CSF, one patient died of infection and another relapsed. There were no relapses in either CML group. In the combined G-CSF group, one patient died of interstitial pneumonitis 48 days after BMT, while the rest of the CML cases are still alive. There were no relapses with rhG-CSF and no serious adverse effects in terms of RRT, acute graft vs. host disease (GVHD), or leukocyte recovery.
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PMID:Recombinant human granulocyte colony-stimulating factor (G-CSF) combined conditioning regimen for allogeneic bone marrow transplantation (BMT) in standard-risk myeloid leukemia. 954 74

We have established a murine model to compare the antileukemic effect of PBPC grafts obtained after treatment with SCF + G-CSF and G-CSF alone. C57/BL6, DBA and Balb/c mice were splenectomized and injected with optimal doses of rhG-CSF (250 microg/kg/day s.c.) or rrSCF (100 microg/kg/day s.c.) or with a combination thereof. On day 5, we determined the hematopoietic potential (number of CD34+ cells, CFUs, total CFC, CFU-gm), the proportion of lymphoid (T, NK and B cells) and myeloid components and graft-versus-leukemia activity after allogeneic and syngeneic PBPCT and BMT in Balb/c mice bearing a B-lymphoblastic leukemia cell line (A20). The absolute number of progenitor cells increased two-fold after administering a combination of G-CSF and SCF as compared to G-CSF alone (1500 vs 940 CD34+ cells/microl; 190 vs 70 total CFC/microl; 150 vs 50 CFU-gm/microl and 6600 vs 3000 CFUs/ml). Although no differences could be detected in the cellular composition, especially in the number of T cells, PBPC grafts mobilized by the combination of G-CSF + SCF demonstrated significantly higher antileukemic activity compared to G-CSF alone (94% vs 71% freedom from leukemia, P < 0.05). Because the incidence of lethal GVHD was similar in both groups, improved GVL activity resulted in superior overall survival. Our data suggest that the higher number of progenitor cells can be harvested after G-CSF + SCF and that grafts mobilized by G-CSF + SCF exert significantly enhanced antileukemic activity compared to those harvested after treatment with G-CSF alone.
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PMID:Superior antileukemic activity of murine peripheral blood progenitor cell (PBPC) grafts mobilized by G-CSF and stem cell factor (SCF) as compared to G-CSF alone. 971 86

One hundred and five consecutive primary high-risk myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS) or secondary acute myeloid leukaemia (sAML) evolving from MDS (performance status 0-3, ECOG) entered this study. Induction chemotherapy (CT) consisted of idarubicine 12 mg/m2 i.v. on days 1 and 2, etoposide 60 mg/m2/12h i.v. for 5d, Ara-C 120 mg/ m2/12h i.v. for 5d (one or two courses). Patients were randomized to receive or not G-CSF (5 microg/kg/d subcutaneously 48 h after the end of CT). 52 cases underwent CT alone and 53 CT+G-CSF. The CT+ G-CSF patients had a significantly shorter duration of neutropenia (8 nu 16d) with a lower incidence of infections and significantly better responses (CR+PR: 74% v 52%, P<0.05). 40 patients entered CR: 17 with CT and 2 3 with CT+G-CSF. Responders underwent two consolidation courses with the same CT, followed by high-dose Ara-C (2 g/m2 every 12h for 3 d). Most CRs were clonal. At present 21 responders have relapsed (median relapse-free survival 4 5 months). Eight responders received an allo-BMT, six are alive in CR 7-57 months post-transplant. Therefore allo-BMT only increases the chance of a long survival and possible cure. In conclusion, CT+G-CSF did not prolong either CR duration or survival; the growth factor support, however, increased the number of allo-transplantable cases by inducing higher remission rates and improving clinical conditions.
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PMID:Randomized clinical study comparing aggressive chemotherapy with or without G-CSF support for high-risk myelodysplastic syndromes or secondary acute myeloid leukaemia evolving from MDS. 972 93

We present a case of death likely to be directly due to cyclosporine (CsA) neurotoxicity. To date, there have been no reports of deaths directly due to CsA neurotoxicity, nor has an associated histological lesion been described independent of confounding processes. A 54-year-old male received an HLA-matched-unrelated BMT for CML. He developed progressive encephalopathy and on day +79 had a generalized seizure. All CSF studies were negative for infectious causes. MRI revealed diffuse, symmetrical white matter abnormalities located in the occipital sub-cortex, thalamus, mid brain, pons, and cerebellum which were typical of CsA toxicity. The patient died of central respiratory failure within 72 h of discontinuing CsA. Autopsy revealed diffuse patchy white matter edema and astrocytic injury without evidence of axonopathy, demyelination, microvascular injury, or infectious/inflammatory process. This case demonstrates previously undescribed lethal CsA neurotoxicity and may reveal an associated primary pathological lesion.
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PMID:Fatal outcome due to cyclosporine neurotoxicity with associated pathological findings. 1019 8

We studied the effects of an intensified induction/consolidation treatment containing fludarabine (ICE/FLAN/FLAN) on the mobilization and collection of peripheral blood stem cells (PBSC) in 31 consecutive untreated acute myeloid leukaemia (AML) patients. The complete remission (CR) rate was comparable to classic inductions (68% after ICE; 84% after ICE-FLAN I). To mobilize PBSC, 19 patients received 10 microg/kg/d of granulocyte-colony stimulating factor (G-CSF) starting at day 13 after FLAN, 13 (69%) of whom were found to be nonmobilizers. When a second G-CSF administration was performed in 10/13 patients mobilization was either not achieved (8/10) or was considered insufficient (<1 x 106 CD34+ cells/kg) (2/10) and all 13 were subsequently submitted to bone marrow harvest. The harvest was considered adequate in 12/13 (92%) patients and autologous BMT (ABMT) has so far been performed in 10/12 cases with a mean of 8.6 x 108/kg nucleated reinfused cells. The median times to neutrophil and platelet recovery after ABMT did not significantly differ from those of two previous series of patients treated with ABMT without fludarabine-containing regimens. Adequate amounts of PBSC were obtained in 6/19 (31%) patients, who were then reinfused. Median times for platelet recovery were significantly longer than in a previous series of 26 AML cases reinfused with PBSC after treatment with the ICE-NOVIA induction/consolidation regimen (125 v 20 d to 20 x 109 plt/l, P < 0.02; 218 v 37 d to 50 x 109 plt/l, P < 0.02). In addition, times for platelet recovery after ICE/FLAN/FLAN were not significantly different from those in a previous group treated with ABMT performed after ICE/NOVIA,without fludarabine. We conclude that fludarabine-containing regimens severely impair mobilization and collection of PBSC in AML patients and seem unsuitable when PBSC autotransplantation is programmed.
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PMID:Fludarabine-containing regimens severely impair peripheral blood stem cells mobilization and collection in acute myeloid leukaemia patients. 1035 46

We have investigated the response of unmanipulated and lymphocyte-depleted BM cells (BMC), pretreated with monoclonal rat antihuman lymphocyte (CD52) antibody (Campath-1G) used for prevention of GvHD, to incubation with rhIL-6 alone or in combination with rhGM-CSF, rhIL-3, or both. We investigated optimal conditions needed for incubation of human BMC under conditions that can be upscaled for clinical application prior to autologous (auto-BMT) and allogeneic blood or BM transplantation (allo-BMT). When used as a single agent, rhIL-6 showed no or a minimal effect in enhancing in vitro CFU-GM colony formation of human BMC. A potent additive effect was obtained when rhIL-6 was added to rhGM-CSF, rhIL-3, or a combination of both. Binding of the mAb Campath-1G, which is used for in vivo and in vitro depletion of immunocompetent lymphocytes to BMC, did not reduce the enhancing effect of a combination of rhGM-CSF and rhIL-3 on CFU-GM in the presence or absence of rhIL-6. Our present and previously published observations suggest that enhancement of hematopoiesis by rhIL-6 and other hematopoietic growth factors is T cell independent. Based on the present observations, pilot clinical studies to determine the potential benefit of in vitro activation of BMC prior to BMT with various cytokine combinations, including rhIL-6, seems justified. Our goal is to enhance hematopoietic reconstitution in vivo, focusing on possible enhancement of platelet reconstitution in vivo toward safer auto-BMT and more effective allo-BMT with better engraftment of T cell-depleted allografts while avoiding GvHD.
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PMID:Enhancement of hematopoietic reconstitution with recombinant cytokines: effect of rhIL-6 in combination with rhGM-CSF and rhIL-3 on unmodified or T cell-depleted bone marrow. 1041 47


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