Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0018133 (graft-versus-host disease)
18,032 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Humanized anti-Tac is a genetically engineered human IgG1 monoclonal antibody specific for Tac, the alpha subunit of the interleukin-2 (IL-2) receptor, and blocks IL-2-dependent activation of human T lymphocytes. The safety, pharmacokinetics, and immunosuppressive activity of humanized anti-Tac were evaluated in 20 patients who developed acute graft-versus-host disease (GVHD) after allogeneic marrow transplantation. Patients had developed acute GVHD at 5 to 26 (median, 14) days after transplantation and had failed to respond to primary therapy with glucocorticoids. Sequential groups of 4 patients each received a single 1-hour infusion of antibody in escalating doses of 0.5, 1.0, or 1.5 mg/kg; 8 additional patients were then treated with 1.5 mg/kg. A second infusion of antibody was administered after 11 to 48 (median, 16) days in 8 patients who had transient improvement of GVHD after the first infusion. Acute side effects, limited to chills in 1 patient and diaphoresis in another, were observed during or shortly after the antibody infusion. Overall improvement of acute GVHD occurred in 8 patients, 6 of whom were treated with a single antibody infusion and 2 with two infusions. Four responses were complete and 4 were partial. Three additional patients had improvement in one organ but progression in another. Responses occurred in 9 of 16 cases with skin disease, 3 of 15 with liver disease, and 6 of 12 with gastrointestinal disease. Two patients survive at 529 and 645 days after antibody treatment. Two patients died after relapse of leukemia. Sixteen patients died of infection or organ failure between 5 and 211 (median, 55) days. The terminal elimination half-life of the antibody was 44 to 363 hours, with a harmonic mean of 79, 88, and 94 hours, respectively, for the three doses studied. Absolute peripheral blood T-lymphocyte counts remained unchanged during the 56 days after infusion of the antibody. A fraction of circulating T cells expressed the alpha chain of the IL-2 receptor that, in some patients, was bound by antibody in vivo up to 28 days after treatment. No patient developed a measurable antibody response to humanized anti-Tac. Humanized anti-Tac has a long half-life after intravenous injection in humans, superior to any rodent monoclonal antibody specific for human T cells, and does not appear to induce antibody formation in recipients of marrow transplants. Improvement of steroid-refractory GVHD in 40% of patients after only one or two antibody infusions indicates that humanized anti-Tac is immunosuppressive.
...
PMID:Treatment of acute graft-versus-host disease with humanized anti-Tac: an antibody that binds to the interleukin-2 receptor. 804 47

The best treatment of CMV gastrointestinal disease has been controversial, with some centers adding intravenous (i.v.) Ig to antiviral chemotherapy. The aim of this retrospective survey was to compare the outcome of antiviral chemotherapy with or without i.v. Ig. A questionnaire was sent to centers belonging to the EBMT. Thirty-three patients with CMV gastrointestinal disease were reported, 22 patients were given antiviral chemotherapy alone and 11 patients a combination of antiviral chemotherapy and i.v. Ig. Eighteen of 33 (55%) patients responded to therapy, 13 of those treated with antiviral chemotherapy alone and five (45%) of those treated with the combination (P = NS). Patients with acute GVHD of grades II-IV had significantly worse outcomes than patients with acute GVHD grades 0-I. In a Cox proportional hazards model corrected for acute GVHD there was no difference in outcome of CMV gastrointestinal disease with or without addition of Ig. Survival at 100 days after diagnosis of CMV gastrointestinal disease was 64%. There was no difference in survival in patients treated with or without i.v. Ig. The results of this retrospective survey indicate that addition of i.v. Ig to antiviral chemotherapy might not improve outcome in patients with biopsy-proven CMV gastrointestinal disease.
...
PMID:Use of intravenous immune globulin in addition to antiviral therapy in the treatment of CMV gastrointestinal disease in allogeneic bone marrow transplant patients: a report from the European Group for Blood and Marrow Transplantation (EBMT). Infectious Diseases Working Party of the EBMT. 953 39

We identified 10 patients who developed cytomegalovirus (CMV) retinitis after HSCT during a 14-year period. The median day of diagnosis of CMV retinitis after transplantation was day 251 (range, days 106--365). CMV retinitis was associated with CMV serostatus of donor or recipient (P=0.01), CMV reactivation before day 100 (P=0.007), delayed lymphocyte engraftment (P<0.05), and chronic graft versus host disease (GVHD; P<0.001). In allogeneic recipients of HSCT who were alive at day 100 after transplantation and had chronic clinical extensive GVHD, the incidence of GVHD was 1.4% (8 of 577). Five of 10 patients had other manifestation of CMV disease before retinitis occurred (4 with gastrointestinal disease and 1 with interstitial pneumonia; median time, 70 days before onset of CMV retinitis; range, 58--279 days), and 4 others had CMV excretion. CMV retinitis was bilateral in 4 patients; 9 of 10 patients had ocular symptoms (i.e., decreased vision and floaters). Six of 7 patients responded well to ganciclovir or foscarnet systemic treatment, 1 improved only after switching to cidofovir, and 1 patient who received a transplant in 1983 did not respond to acyclovir treatment. In conclusion, CMV retinitis is an uncommon late complication after HSCT that occurs mainly in seropositive allograft recipients with previous CMV reactivation and chronic GVHD, and with delayed engraftment of lymphocytes.
...
PMID:Virological, clinical, and ophthalmologic features of cytomegalovirus retinitis after hematopoietic stem cell transplantation. 1117 Sep 10

We report a 19-year-old male with acute myeloid leukemia who developed an early cytomegalovirus gastrointestinal disease with a high level of cytomegalovirus antigenemia after bone marrow transplantation. He underwent bone marrow transplantation from HLA-matched related donor. He developed acute graft-versus-host disease on day 15, and he immediately went on prednisolone. The graft-versus-host disease disappeared immediately, but he developed a severe epigastralgia on day 23. Although absolute neutrophil count was 0.5 x 10(9)/l, the pp65 cytomegalovirus antigenemia increased up to 1120 cells/slide. The endoscope examination was performed on day 29 and it showed erosive gastritis, and microscopical examination revealed nuclear inclusion bodies and positive cells of cytomegalovirus antigen. Ganciclovir treatment was started, and it continued until negative cytomegalovirus antigenemia was confirmed. He consequently discharged to outpatient without late phase CMV diseases or recurrence of AML. We assessed that the patient had two risk factors. First, he was the cytomegalovirus seropositive patient and received bone marrow from seronegative donor. Second, he was treated with prednisolone for acute graft-versus-host disease. The ganciclovir treatment turned out to be successful, but the cytomegalovirus disease developed too early to start the antigenemia guided preemptive treatment. The high-risk patients could develop the early cytomegalovirus disease even though under the status of myelosuppression after bone marrow transplantation.
...
PMID:Early cytomegalovirus (CMV) gastrointestinal disease that developed 19 days after bone marrow transplantation, with a high-level of CMV antigenemia, of up to 1120 cells/slide. 1516 Mar 7

A 76-year old man was referred for radiological evaluation of recurrent left sided flank pain, micro-haematuria and renal cysts. Computer tomographic findings were colon wall-thickening and submucosal fat (fat halo sign) throughout the entire length of the colon. Fat halo sign is thought to be a reliable marker for inflammatory bowel disease. It has also been reported in patients receiving cytoreductive therapy or in patients with graft-versus-host disease. A relation between short segment fat halo sign and obesity in asymptomatic patients is presumed. None of these conditions apply for this patient without evidence of previous or present gastrointestinal disease. The striking changes of the colon wall are exceptional, although they have to be considered as a normal finding.
...
PMID:["Fat halo sign of the colon": not only in patients with inflammatory bowel disease. An illustrated case-report]. 1651 90

Late cytomegalovirus (CMV) disease beyond day 100 after hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT) has become an increasing problem after the introduction of preemptive ganciclovir (GCV) administration. To clarify the risk factors and outcome for late CMV reactivation and disease, we retrospectively analyzed the records of 101 Japanese adult patients who underwent allogeneic HSCT between 1998 and 2005 at our hospital. Fifty-one developed late positive CMV antigenemia, with a cumulative incidence of 53%. Recipient CMV seropositivity, the use of alemtuzumab, chronic GVHD, and high-dose steroids were significantly associated with late positive antigenemia. Eight patients developed late CMV disease, with a cumulative incidence of 8%, including retinitis and gastrointestinal disease. None progressed to a fatal disease. The use of alemtuzumab was identified as an independent significant risk factor for late CMV disease, although it was not associated with increased non-relapse mortality. Among the 51 patients with late positive antigenemia, 28 had consistently less than three positive cells, 25 of whom showed negative conversion without antiviral agents. In conclusion, late CMV antigenemia appeared to develop frequently, especially in patients with profound immune suppression; however, a fatal outcome could be prevented by optimal preemptive therapy. Low-level antigenemia may not require antiviral treatments.
...
PMID:Clinical features of late cytomegalovirus infection after hematopoietic stem cell transplantation. 1832 Jan 38

GVHD remains a serious complication after allogeneic SCT. We describe 13 paediatric patients treated with daclizumab for refractory acute GVHD (aGVHD). After 30 days of daclizumab administration, all patients with cutaneous aGVHD reached complete response. Among patients with gastrointestinal disease, 50 and 30% had complete and partial response, respectively, whereas 11 and 55% of patients with hepatic aGVHD achieved CR and PR, respectively. Overall, complete (46%) and partial (46%) responses were demonstrated in 92% of our patients, whereas the remaining patients (8%) were nonresponders. No life-threatening infectious episodes were recorded within 100 days from transplant in this selected group of paediatric patients. Overall 46% of patients were alive at a median of 461 days from SCT, but 50% of them developed chronic GVHD. In our experience, daclizumab proved to be a useful and safe treatment for refractory and steroid-resistant/dependent aGVHD, in particular for cutaneous and low-moderate intestinal involvement.
...
PMID:Daclizumab as useful treatment in refractory acute GVHD: a paediatric experience. 1885 21

New insights gained through the use of state-of-the-art technologies, including next-generation sequencing, are starting to reveal that the association between the gastrointestinal tract and the resident mycobiota (fungal community) is complex and multifaceted, in which fungi are active participants influencing health and disease. Characterizing the human mycobiome (the fungi and their genome) in healthy individuals showed that the gastrointestinal tract contains 66 fungal genera and 184 fungal species, with Candida as the dominant fungal genera. Although fungi have been associated with a number of gastrointestinal diseases, characterization of the mycobiome has mainly been focused on patients with IBD and graft-versus-host disease. In this Review, we summarize the findings from studies investigating the relationship between the gut mycobiota and gastrointestinal diseases, which indicate that fungi contribute to the aggravation of the inflammatory response, leading to increased disease severity. A model explaining the mechanisms underlying the role of the mycobiota in gastrointestinal diseases is also presented. Our understanding of the contribution of the mycobiota to health and disease is still in its infancy and leaves a number of questions to be addressed. Answering these questions might lead to novel approaches to prevent and/or manage acute as well as chronic gastrointestinal disease.
...
PMID:Mycobiota in gastrointestinal diseases. 2538 27

Patients undergoing haematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT) are at high risk of severe gastrointestinal bleeding caused by infections, graft versus host disease, and disturbances in haemostasis. BK polyomavirus (BKPyV) is known to cause hemorrhagic cystitis, but there is also evidence of BKV shedding in stool and its association with gastrointestinal disease. We report putative association of BKPyV replication with high plasma viral loads in a pediatric HSCT patient developing hemorrhagic cystitis and severe gastrointestinal bleeding necessitating intensive care. The observation was based on chart review and analysis of BKPyV DNA loads in plasma and urine as well as retrospective BKPyV-specific IgM and IgG measurements in weekly samples until three months post-transplant. The gastrointestinal bleeding was observed after a >100-fold increase in the plasma BKPyV loads and the start of hemorrhagic cystitis. The BKPyV-specific antibody response indicated past infection prior to transplantation, but increasing IgG titers were seen following BKPyV replication. The gastrointestinal biopsies were taken at a late stage of the episode and were no longer informative of BK polyomavirus involvement. In conclusion, gastrointestinal complications with bleeding are a significant problem after allogeneic HSCT to which viral infections including BKPyV may contribute.
...
PMID:Diffuse gastrointestinal bleeding and BK polyomavirus replication in a pediatric allogeneic haematopoietic stem cell transplant patient. 2554 76

The relative contribution of human cytomegalovirus (HMCV)-specific CD4(+) and CD8(+) T cells to the control of HCMV infection in hematopoietic stem cell transplant (HSCT) recipients is still controversial. HCMV reactivation and HCMV-specific CD4(+) and CD8(+) T cell reconstitution were monitored for 1 year in 63 HCMV-seropositive patients receiving HSCT. HCMV reactivation was detected in all but 2 patients. In 20 of 63 (31.7%) patients (group 1) HCMV infection resolved spontaneously, whereas 32 of 63 (50.8%) patients (group 2) controlled the infection after a single short-course of pre-emptive therapy and the remaining 9 (14.3%) patients (group 3) suffered from relapsing episodes of HCMV infection, requiring multiple courses of antiviral therapy. The kinetics and magnitude of HCMV-specific CD8(+) T cell reconstitution were comparable among the 3 groups, but HCMV-specific CD4(+) T cells were lower in number in patients requiring antiviral treatment. HCMV-seronegative donors, as well as unrelated donors (receiving antithymocyte globulin) and acute graft-versus-host disease (GVHD) were associated with both delayed HCMV-specific CD4(+) T cell reconstitution and severity of infection. Conversely, these risk factors had no impact on HCMV-specific CD8(+) T cells. Eight patients with previous GVHD suffered from HCMV gastrointestinal disease, although in the presence of HCMV-specific CD4(+) and CD8(+) systemic immunity and undetectable HCMV DNA in blood. Reconstitution of systemic HCMV-specific CD4(+) T cell immunity is required for control of HCMV reactivation in adult HSCT recipients, but it may not be sufficient to prevent late-onset organ localization in patients with GVHD. HCMV-specific CD8(+) T cells contribute to control of HCMV infection, but only after HCMV-specific CD4(+) T cell reconstitution.
...
PMID:Reconstitution of Human Cytomegalovirus-Specific CD4+ T Cells is Critical for Control of Virus Reactivation in Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplant Recipients but Does Not Prevent Organ Infection. 2626 Jun 78


1