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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)
Bone marrow transplantation has become an accepted procedure for the treatment of severe aplastic anemia, hematologic malignancies (particularly
lymphoma
and leukemia) and certain inborn errors of metabolism and immunity. However, numerous complications follow bone marrow transplantation. Liver disease is a very common and complex complication after human transplantation. The major complications are: veno-occlusive disease,
graft-versus-host disease
acute and/or chronic. In this decade, the results of bone marrow transplantation will enhance.
...
PMID:[Hepatic complications of bone marrow transplantation]. 184 69
Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) lymphoproliferative disease is seen in patients with both congenital and acquired immunodeficiencies. Lymphoproliferative disease has been reported in 1 to 3% of renal transplant recipients. Most patients presented with solid tumor masses, rather than an infectious mononucleosis-like syndrome. About one third of cases had involvement of the renal allograft with tumor; the small intestine or central nervous system was also frequently affected. About half of the patients survived. The most frequent therapy used for survivors was decreasing the dose of immunosuppressive therapy and surgical resection of lymphoproliferative lesions. Compared with fatal cases, survivors more often had evidence of active EBV infection (primary or reactivated), received cyclosporine as the major immunosuppressive agent, had polyclonal lesions, and had B-cell hyperplasia rather than
lymphoma
. Lymphoproliferative disease has been described in 5 to 13% of heart transplant recipients. In our review, the cardiac allograft was not involved by disease in any patient; however, the lungs were involved in more than half of the cases. The soft tissues were frequent sites of lymphoproliferative disease. All patients had
lymphoma
or immunoblastic sarcoma on pathology and all had monoclonal lesions. While only 8% of patients survived, about half died from causes unrelated to lymphoproliferative disease. EBV lymphoproliferative disease has been reported in 9% of heart-lung transplant recipients. Most of the patients presented with pulmonary symptoms and the pulmonary allograft was involved in 80% of cases. The large and small intestine were frequently affected. About 60% of patients survived; survivors were treated with acyclovir and decreases in the dose of immunosuppressive drugs. Lymphoproliferative disease has been described in 2% of liver transplant recipients. In our review, the hepatic allograft was involved in one third of cases; the tonsils, kidneys, and small intestine were frequently affected. Half of the patients survived; survivors were most often treated with reduction in immunosuppressive therapy and surgical resection of lesions. Compared with fatal cases, survivors had fewer organs involved and fewer monoclonal lesions. Lymphoproliferative disease has been reported in 1 to 2% of bone marrow transplant recipients. Use of T-cell depleted bone marrow and infusion of anti-T-cell antibodies to prevent
graft-versus-host disease
increased the risk of EBV lymphoproliferative disease. In our review, the bone marrow was involved by lymphoproliferative disease in one third of cases; the liver, spleen, kidney, and lungs were frequently affected. About 16% of patients survived; 2 survivors were treated with infusions of monoclonal anti-B-cell antibodies and 1 received interferon alpha.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Epstein-Barr virus lymphoproliferative disease associated with acquired immunodeficiency. 184 44
Autologous bone marrow transplantation (Auto-KMT) involves harvesting of a portion of a patient's bone marrow for subsequent reinfusion and restoration of marrow function following ablative doses of cytotoxic therapy, used in the treatment of various malignancies. The use of autologous rather than allogeneic marrow stem cells reduces the probability of acute
graft-versus-host disease
and reduces the need for obtaining HLA-matched marrow from limited donor pools. The greatest problem in Auto-KMT involves efficacy of the cytotoxic therapy and the obvious lack of graft-versus-leukemia effect. In addition, a theoretical limitation is that the marrow may contain clonogenic malignant cells, which may be the source of reestablished disease. In absence of phase III clinical trials directly comparing Auto-KMT with conventional therapies in the treatment of most malignancies, its role continues to be poorly defined. In an attempt to identify subsets of patients with leukemia or
lymphoma
who might benefit from transplantation, we performed this study of recent reports from the literature. It is concluded that the associated mortality is acceptable. At present the indications for Auto-KMT are
lymphoma
in relapse after conventional therapy and acute myeloblastic leukemia in second remission. It is probable that Auto-BMT will be used in earlier disease stages in the future (first remission).
...
PMID:[Autologous bone marrow transplantation in malignant hematologic diseases]. 185 58
A combination of cyclosporine (CSA) and methylprednisolone (MP) was used as
graft-versus-host disease
(
GVHD
) prophylaxis in 25 patients age 11-47 years (median 27 years) who received HLA-compatible sibling marrow transplants after myeloablative therapy for leukemia, myelodysplasia or
lymphoma
. CSA was initiated at 3 mg/kg/day in two divided doses, and the dose was adjusted to maintain a trough whole blood h.p.l.c. concentration between 200 and 800 ng/ml. While on i.v. CSA, the dose of CSA was increased for 10 of the 25 patients. The actuarial rate of grades II-IV acute
GVHD
was 37%. Those patients who developed moderate to severe
GVHD
had a significantly higher early mortality than those who did not (56% vs 12%, p = 0.02). There was a significant association between the development of acute
GVHD
and a mean week 2 CSA trough concentration less than 250 ng/ml. Life threatening regimen-related toxicities in the first 100 days included capillary leak syndrome, acute pancreatitis and small bowel perforation. Although the combination of CSA and MP in this dosing schedule was active in preventing acute
GVHD
, nephrotoxicity remained a problem, and outcome was limited by the inability to achieve the target CSA trough concentration in a substantial proportion of patients.
...
PMID:Cyclosporine and methylprednisolone after allogeneic marrow transplantation: association between low cyclosporine concentration and risk of acute graft-versus-host disease. 187 93
Twenty-two patients, ages 16.6 to 43.9 years (median age, 30 years), with relapsed or refractory
lymphoma
were treated by allogeneic bone marrow transplantation after high-dose chemotherapy with or without total body irradiation (TBI). Seven patients had Hodgkin's disease, four had low-grade histology non-Hodgkin's lymphoma (NHL), seven had intermediate-grade NHL, and four had high-grade NHL. Of the 22 patients, 17 received T-cell (CD-3)-depleted marrow after intensive pretransplant chemoradiotherapy, and five received T-cell-replete grafts after chemotherapy-based preparative regimens. Five patients were transplanted from donors other than genotypically HLA-identical siblings: four from partially HLA-matched relatives, and one from a phenotypically HLA-identical unrelated donor. Acute graft-versus-host disease (
GVHD
) was less than or equal to grade II in all patients, and chronic
GVHD
was limited or absent in all but one patient. Of the 21 assessable patients, 17 (80.9%) achieved complete remissions. Death due to transplant-associated complications occurred in five patients, and five patients have relapsed. Thirteen patients are alive, and 12 are continuously relapse-free at a median follow-up of longer than 28 months (range, greater than 10 to greater than 58 months) from transplant. The cumulative probability of treatment failure from relapse or progression of
lymphoma
was 29% (95% confidence interval [CI], 12% to 51%), while the actuarial
lymphoma
-free (ie, event-free) survival plateau is 54.6% (95% CI, 34% to 76%). For young patients with advanced malignant
lymphoma
, allogeneic bone marrow transplantation appears superior to salvage chemotherapy for achievement of long-term,
lymphoma
-free survival and may be preferable to autologous bone marrow transplantation for selected patients.
...
PMID:Allogeneic bone marrow transplantation for relapsed and refractory lymphoma using genotypically HLA-identical and alternative donors. 191 35
Since 1979, a total of 17 patients with Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome have undergone allogeneic bone marrow transplantation at Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center. Eleven patients received marrow from either human leukocyte antigen (HLA) genotypically identical siblings (nine patients) or an HLA phenotypically identical parent (two patients). Six patients received marrow grafts from HLA-disparate parents. Cytoreduction was accomplished with busulfan and cyclophosphamide for the HLA-identical recipients and total-body irradiation followed by high-dose cytarabine therapy in the mismatched recipients. All 11 recipients of HLA-identical marrow had successful grafts, and 10 of 11 are alive and well 28 to 145 months after transplantation. One patient died 10 months after transplantation of chronic
graft-versus-host disease
and interstitial pneumonitis caused by cytomegalovirus. Only one of the six mismatched graft recipients survives, 52+ months after transplantation; the other patients have died of extensive chronic
graft-versus-host disease
(one patient),
lymphoma
(three patients), or progressive pancytopenia accompanying Candida sepsis (one patient). Thus bone marrow transplantation represents the treatment of choice in patients with Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome who have an HLA-identical donor. However, our approach for patients lacking a histocompatible family donor requires modifications to overcome allogeneic resistance and decrease the posttransplantation immunoincompetence in these patients.
...
PMID:Marrow transplantation from human leukocyte antigen-identical or haploidentical donors for correction of Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome. 196 Jun 5
An 11-year-old boy with acute myeloblastic leukaemia in first remission received an allogeneic mismatched bone-marrow transplant (BMT) from his father in 1979; subsequent HLA typing showed that his haemopoietic system had been repopulated by the donor cells. In 1986 hypereosinophilic syndrome, secondary to a T-cell lymphocytic
lymphoma
, developed in the father, then aged 45 years. A full haematological remission was obtained by means of standard acute lymphoblastic leukaemia treatment. He then received melphalan, total body irradiation, and a BMT from his son.
Graft-versus-host disease
was transient in both patients, and father and son remain well and disease-free 20 months and 10 years, respectively, after BMT.
...
PMID:Bone-marrow transplant from father to son and subsequent graft from son to father. 197 Jan 9
The existence of an immunologic antileukemia reaction associated with allogeneic bone marrow transplantation (BMT) is well established. However, a similar graft-versus-tumor effect against lymphomas has not been demonstrated. We analyzed the results of BMT in 118 consecutive patients with relapsed Hodgkin's disease or aggressive non-Hodgkin's lymphoma. The 38 patients less than 50 years of age with HLA-matched donors had allogenic marrow transplants, and the other 80 patients received purged autologous grafts. The median age was 26 years in both the allogeneic and the autologous graft recipients. The patient's response to conventional salvage therapy before transplant was the only factor that influenced the event-free survival after BMT (P less than .001). Both the patient's response to salvage therapy before BMT (P less than .001) and the type of graft (P = .02) significantly influenced the probability of relapse after BMT. The actuarial probability of relapse in patients who responded to conventional salvage therapy before BMT was only 18% after allogenic BMT compared with 46% after autologous BMT. However, the actuarial probability of event-free survival at 4 years was the same, 47% versus 41%, for patients with responsive lymphomas who received allogeneic and autologous transplants, respectively (P = .8). The beneficial antitumor effect of allogeneic BMT was offset by its higher transplant-related mortality (P = .01), largely resulting from
graft-versus-host disease
. Allogeneic BMT appears to induce a clinically significant graft-versus-
lymphoma
effect. The magnitude of this effect is similar to that reported against leukemias.
...
PMID:Evidence of a graft-versus-lymphoma effect associated with allogeneic bone marrow transplantation. 199 Nov 74
We have recently demonstrated that high-dose IL-2 administered for a short period (2.5 days) beginning on the day of bone marrow transplantation mediates a marked protective effect against
GVHD
in mice, while preserving the ability to achieve alloengraftment (1). This protective effect is augmented by administration of T cell-depleted (TCD) syngeneic marrow, and is dependent upon early administration of IL-2 (1). The graft-vs-tumor effect against the EL4 leukemia/
lymphoma
is not diminished in animals protected from
GVHD
by IL-2 (2). In an attempt to determine whether or not IL-2-activated host-type cells might be responsible for
GVHD
protection, we have now performed adoptive transfer studies. The results failed to provide evidence that treatment of lethally irradiated mice with IL-2 activates protective host-derived or syngeneic marrow-derived cell populations which can be adoptively transferred to lethally irradiated secondary recipients receiving allogeneic
GVHD
-producing inocula. Likewise, treatment of lethally irradiated mice with a complete 2.5-day course of IL-2 prior to administration of allogeneic inocula did not lead to
GVHD
protection. These results suggest that either IL-2 directly inhibits the
GVH
reactivity of allogeneic
GVH
-reactive cells, or that
GVH
reactivity is attenuated by IL-2 during the period of interaction of donor- and host-type cells.
...
PMID:Mechanism of the anti-GVHD effect of IL-2. I. Protective host-type cell populations are not induced by IL-2 treatment alone. 204 82
This report describes the histological and immunocytochemical findings in gastrointestinal biopsies and skin of a patient with chronic granulocytic leukaemia which progressed to blastic transformation, who was then treated with chemotherapy and total body irradiation followed by allogeneic bone marrow transplantation. The gut showed endocrine cells in the lamina propria and these had an immunophenotype similar to the glandular epithelium at the sites studied (stomach, duodenum and rectum), supporting the idea that the endocrine cells of the gut are more resistant to the effect of radiation, chemotherapy and
graft-versus-host disease
(
GVHD
) than are other cell types in the epithelium, and that lamina proprial endocrine cells are epithelially derived in this situation. Epidermis and gut epithelium also showed marked atypia due to the conditioning regimen and
GVHD
, and this case illustrates the possibility of misdiagnosis of carcinoma in this increasingly common situation. An additional, unusual feature of this case was the presence of a B-cell UCHL1 + ve
lymphoma
of the colon at autopsy, 122 days post-transplantation.
...
PMID:Epithelial changes following bone marrow transplantation: cytological atypia and epithelial endocrine cells. 205 74
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