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Query: UMLS:C0018133 (
graft-versus-host disease
)
18,032
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A total of 21 multiply transfused patients with severe aplastic anemia (SAA) were treated with bone marrow transplantation between March 1985 and September 1990: 20 allogeneic and one syngeneic transplants. A positive response in mixed lymphocyte culture (MLC) was also noted in 7 allogeneic recipients. Pregraft conditioning included high-dose cyclophosphamide (CY) 200 mg/kg over 4 consecutive days, followed by 300 cGy total-body irradiation the day before BMT. Seventeen patients older than 14 years received additional donor buffy-coat cells infusion for 5 days posttransplant. A combination of methotrexate and cyclosporine was used for prophylaxis of
graft-versus-host disease
. Seventeen patients were alive with a functional graft, and Kaplan-Meier product limit estimates showed a 80.95% probability of survival at 67.7 months. There were 4 deaths: two died of primary graft failure, one from secondary rejection, and the other from chronic
GVHD
-related complications. Acute GVHD, grade I was noted in only one patient (5.6%). In contrast, chronic
GVHD
was observed in 10 out of 18 (55.6%) evaluable patients.
Venoocclusive liver disease
and interstitial pneumonitis were not diagnosed. Our findings indicate that the combination of CY/TBI/BC is well tolerated and results in a low incidence of graft failure/rejection in multiply transfused Chinese patients who received transplants for SAA. The MTX/CsA combination was confirmed as being remarkable in reducing the incidence and severity of acute
GVHD
. For patients with SAA under the age of 40, with an HLA-identical sibling, we highly recommend BMT as the treatment of choice.
...
PMID:Bone marrow transplantation for severe aplastic anemia--a study of twenty-one Chinese patients in Taiwan. 154 48
We analysed data from 114 recipients of HLA-identical sibling transplants who relapsed and received a second transplant between 1978 and 1989. Twenty-nine patients had acute lymphoblastic leukemia, 46 acute myeloid leukemia and 39 chronic myelogenous leukemia. Median (range) interval between first and second transplants was 15 (1-80) months. Following the second transplant, graft failure occurred in 2%, acute
graft-versus-host disease
(
GVHD
) in 27% and chronic
GVHD
in 21% of patients at risk. Risks of interstitial pneumonia and
hepatic veno-occlusive disease
were higher after the second than the first transplant. Two-year probabilities (95% confidence interval) of treatment-related mortality, relapse and leukemia-free survival were 41% (30-53%), 65% (53-75%) and 21% (14-30%), respectively. Leukemia-free survival was 7% (2-19%) among patients relapsing less than 6 months after their first transplant, with high rates of both relapse, 77% (49-92%), and treatment-related mortality 69% (46-85%). In contrast, leukemia-free survival was 28% (19-41%) in those relapsing more than 6 months after the first transplant; in this group the probability of relapse was 59% (45-72%) and treatment-related mortality 30% (20-43%). Factors correlated with better outcome included a diagnosis of chronic myelogenous leukemia, relapse more than 6 months after the first transplant, acute leukemia in remission prior to the second transplant and good performance status.
...
PMID:Second HLA-identical sibling transplants for leukemia recurrence. 160 Apr 15
With the advent of histocompatibility typing, use of bone marrow transplantation for treating hematogenous cancer has dramatically increased. Marrow grafting is preceded by intense immunosuppressive, marrow ablative treatment, usually with high-dose chemotherapy and whole-body irradiation. Because the recipient may be immunocompromised for months after transplantation due to this regimen, complications are numerous. Complications are classified according to the following intervals: pre-engraftment (from pretransplantation treatment to engraftment), postengraftment (3 months afterward), and delayed (longer than 3 months after engraftment). Pre-engraftment complications include bacterial, fungal, and viral infections; tissue-damaging effects (eg, toxic pneumonitis);
hepatic veno-occlusive disease
; and graft rejection. Postengraftment complications include viral, fungal, and protozoal infections; acute
graft-versus-host disease
(
GVHD
); and pneumatosis intestinalis. Delayed complications include chronic
GVHD
and recurrence of cancer. As part of the follow-up team, radiologists should be familiar with clinical aspects of marrow transplantation and be alert for early, potential life-threatening complications.
...
PMID:Bone marrow transplantation: clinical and radiologic aspects. 188 15
One-hundred-and-forty-three patients with haematological malignancy or severe aplastic anaemia received HLA-identical sibling bone marrow transplants. In 111 of these patients who had haematological malignancy and who were prepared for transplant with cyclophosphamide 120 mg/kg and fractionated total body irradiation 12-14 Gy, the incidence of haemorrhagic cystitis and
hepatic veno-occlusive disease
was 13% and 3%, respectively. In contrast, the incidence in 15 leukaemic patients prepared for transplant with chemotherapy regimens containing high-dose busulphan was 47% and 20%, respectively (p less than 0.001). Two patients in this latter group who developed fatal veno-occlusive disease had chronic myeloid leukaemia and had received long-term low-dose busulphan pre-transplant. Neither complication occurred in 26 patients prepared by cyclophosphamide alone (20 patients with severe aplastic anaemia) or with cyclophosphamide and melphalan (six patients with leukaemia). The regimen of busulphan 16 mg/kg in combination with cyclophosphamide 120 mg/kg was associated with a short duration of total leucopenia with a significantly higher leucocyte count on the day of marrow transplant compared to other regimens. Furthermore, oro-pharyngeal mucositis was not severe even when methotrexate was utilised as post-transplant prophylaxis for
graft-versus-host disease
. Thus, while the busulphan-cyclophosphamide regimen appeared useful, we suggest that (1) high-dose busulphan should not be used as a preparative regimen for patients previously exposed to busulphan, and (2) bladder irrigation (as well as intravenous hydration) is necessary to minimise haemorrhagic cystitis in patients given regimens that incorporate high-dose busulphan.
...
PMID:Preparative regimens for marrow transplantation containing busulphan are associated with haemorrhagic cystitis and hepatic veno-occlusive disease but a short duration of leucopenia and little oro-pharyngeal mucositis. 333 86
Liver dysfunction occurs after bone marrow transplantation but the relative importance of
graft versus host disease
and other factors, such as infection, radiation, and drugs, has not been clearly established. We have studied liver status before and after bone marrow transplantation in 43 consecutive patients and have related this to survival and factors that are recognised to cause liver injury. Minor abnormalities of liver tests occurred in 21% of patients before grafting but this did not influence survival or the development of liver disease after transplantation. During the first 50 days after grafting, 83% of patients had abnormal liver tests which were more severe in patients who subsequently died. Alanine transaminase was significantly higher in non-survivors and appeared to predict survival early after transplantation. Only non-survivors developed clinical signs of liver disease. Severe liver disease was always associated with
graft versus host disease
and atypia of the small bile ducts was the most useful histological marker of hepatic involvement with this disease. Two of the patients with hepatic
graft versus host disease
also has
hepatic veno-occlusive disease
and three fatalities had opportunistic infection of the liver, although, in the latter, death was not due primarily to liver dysfunction. Previous hepatitis and androgen therapy could not be implicated as important causes of hepatic damage but chemotherapy for acute leukaemia and conditioning regimens for bone marrow transplantation appear to be the most important factors in the development of
hepatic veno-occlusive disease
.
...
PMID:Liver disease after bone marrow transplantation. 704 84
Fourteen patients with acute nonlymphoblastic leukemia (ANLL) (n = 13) or juvenile chronic myelomonocytic leukemia (n = 1) were transplanted after conditioning with high-dose busulfan (4 mg/kg daily on days -7 to -4) and melphalan (180 mg/m2 on day -2). This protocol was designed for patients considered unable to receive standard conditioning regimens with cyclophosphamide and/or TBI. Five patients (4 children and 1 adult) received a second allogeneic BMT in untreated early marrow relapse after a first BMT. There were 3 procedure-related deaths (PRD), 2 during aplasia and 1 from acute
GVHD
. Two patients survived the procedure; 1 relapsed at 6 months and 1 is alive at 43+ months. Nine subjects (8 children and 1 adult) received an autologous BMT, 7 in first and 2 in second complete remission (CR). Of the 7 patients grafted in first CR, there was 1 PRD, 2 relapses at 3 and 15 months, and four are alive at 38 to 82+ months. One patient grafted in second CR relapsed at 7 months and 1 is alive at 67+ months. Toxicities were mild or moderate in autologous BMT recipients, mainly affecting the gastrointestinal tract. In the allogeneic BMT group, there were more moderate to severe toxicities, including 3 cases of moderate-severe renal toxicity; no cases of such toxicity were seen in ABMT recipients. Two cases of
HVOD
occurred, 1 in each group. These results are encouraging, although the small patient group does not allow any firm conclusions.
...
PMID:High-dose busulfan and melphalan before bone marrow transplantation for acute nonlymphoblastic leukemia. 758 Nov 38
The authors reviewed all gastric biopsy specimens from patients who had undergone bone marrow transplantation at our institution between 1986 and 1991. Ten of 28 patients had gastric vascular ectasia (GVE), a distinct lesion consisting of telangiectatic vessels within the superficial gastric mucosa. All patients undergoing bone marrow transplantation had received a standard chemotherapeutic transplantation regimen consisting of busulfan and cyclophosphamide without total-body irradiation. Eight of the 10 patients with GVE had evidence of upper gastrointestinal tract bleeding, as compared with 4 of 18 patients without GVE. In all 10 patients with GVE, the results of liver chemistry analyses were abnormal. Five patients had
hepatic veno-occlusive disease
, and 8 patients had
graft-versus-host disease
. Endoscopic biopsy samples of GVE showed markedly dilated vascular spaces similar to those seen in gastric antral vascular ectasia and diffuse antral vascular ectasia. However, no thrombi were identified in these enlarged vessels. Digital morphometry showed the mean cross-sectional area of GVE vessels was significantly greater (P < .001, Wilcoxon's rank-sum test) than the mean vessel areas of 10 chemical gastritis and 10 normal antral (control) biopsy samples. Gastric vascular ectasia may be a significant cause of gastrointestinal bleeding in patients undergoing bone marrow transplantation. The pathogenesis of GVE is unknown; transplantation regimen toxicity may play a role.
...
PMID:Gastric vascular ectasia in patients undergoing bone marrow transplantation. 798 65
Cytokine gene expression in peripheral blood mononuclear cells during the development of
graft-versus-host disease
(
GVHD
) in patients who underwent allogeneic bone marrow transplantation (allo BMT) was analysed using a semiquantitative reverse-transcriptase polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR). The expression of interleukin (IL)-1 beta, IL-6, and tumour necrosis factor (TNF)-alpha mRNA was increased during the development of
GVHD
and the degree of this increment depended on the severity of the disease. IL-2 expression was not detected at all and interferon-gamma expression was not much changed during
GVHD
. In patients with
hepatic veno-occlusive disease
(VOD), another transplantation-related complication, the expression of IL-1 beta and TNF-alpha mRNA was increased but IL-6 mRNA expression showed little increase. These findings suggest that IL-1 beta, IL-6 and TNF-alpha produced by peripheral blood mononuclear cells play an important role in the development of
GVHD
. Furthermore, liver dysfunction due to
GVHD
or VOD may be distinguishable by this type of cytokine analysis. Analysis of cytokine mRNA expression in peripheral blood mononuclear cells after allogeneic bone marrow transplantation may provide important information concerning the immune response and the cytokine network system in marrow transplant patients.
...
PMID:Cytokine gene expression in peripheral blood mononuclear cells during graft-versus-host disease after allogeneic bone marrow transplantation. 813 79
Abdominal problems and catastrophes often complicate the clinical course after bone marrow transplantation (BMT) in children. These complications can be grouped into categories of infection, chemotherapy and radiation toxicity,
graft-versus-host disease
(
GVHD
), recurrent or de novo malignancy, and miscellaneous complications and can involve the hepatobiliary system, pancreas, spleen, gastrointestinal tract, and urinary tract. Infection is common after BMT: the causative organism depends on the changing immunologic state of the recipient and even on environmental factors such as recent construction, humidity, and antibiotic use. Chemotherapy and radiation therapy can cause
hepatic veno-occlusive disease
, pancreatitis, nephritis, and hemorrhagic cystitis.
GVHD
is a process in which donor lymphoid cells produce damage to recipient target organs, especially skin, liver, and intestinal mucosa. Recurrent or de novo disease or malignancies, particularly B-cell lymphomas, may develop in chronically immunocompromised children. Other problems include stone disease, splenic and renal infarction, and complications of hyperalimentation therapy. Abdominal imaging, including plain radiography, contrast material-enhanced studies of the bowel, real-time and duplex sonography, and computed tomography, is essential in diagnosing these problems and evaluating response to therapy.
...
PMID:Abdominal complications in pediatric bone marrow transplant recipients. 821 May 93
The combination of busulfan (Bu) and cyclophosphamide (Cy) has been found to be effective preparative therapy for patients treated with allogeneic bone marrow transplantation (BMT). We developed the BuCy2 regimen, which contains a lower dose of cyclophosphamide than the original BuCy regimen, in the hope of reducing regimen-related toxicities. We have studied the use of BuCy2 as preparation for allogeneic BMT in patients with acute myelogenous leukemia, acute lymphocytic leukemia, and multiple myeloma. In patients with acute myelogenous leukemia, the leukemia-free survival and regimen-related toxicity rates obtained in our study appear similar to those achieved with other preparative regimens, including those containing Cy and total body irradiation (TBI). BuCy2 is also an effective BMT preparative regimen in patients with acute lymphocytic leukemia and multiple myeloma. Treatment with BuCy2 results in a lower incidence of severe stomatitis and probably of interstitial pneumonia than does treatment with Cy/TBI, but
hepatic veno-occlusive disease
occurs more frequently in BuCy-treated patients. The incidence of veno-occlusive disease appears to be affected by agents used as prophylaxis for
graft-versus-host disease
. Compared with Cy/TBI regimens, BuCy treatment is likely to result in fewer delayed effects of treatment, such as impairment of fertility and second malignancies. Current clinical efforts are focusing on ways to improve the antileukemic activity of the BuCy preparative regimen and to reduce regimen-related toxicities.
...
PMID:Allogeneic bone marrow transplantation for acute myelogenous leukemia, acute lymphocytic leukemia, and multiple myeloma following preparation with busulfan and cyclophosphamide (BuCy2). 834 74
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