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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)
An 8-month-old girl with SCID presented with severe bronchiolitis. She received an HLA-identical sibling BMT without conditioning or
GVHD
prophylaxis. She deteriorated despite mechanical ventilation but had normal cardiac, hepatic and renal function. ECMO was instituted on day +3 and subsequent improvement was seen concurrently with emergence of CD4+ cells on day +11. She was taken off ECMO on day +18 and suffered a left-sided
stroke
evidenced by a dense left hemiplegia. She was extubated on day +25 and weaned from supplemental oxygen on day +36 and at day +100 has recovered strength in her extremities. This is the first successful use of ECMO as a bridge to engraftment in a BMT patient.
...
PMID:Successful use of extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO) during BMT for SCID. 2511 3
Since 1988, 34 pediatric patients with severe sickle cell disease have received bone marrow transplantation (BMT) from HLA-identical siblings in France. After 1992, documentation of the favorable effect of hydroxyurea therapy on the frequency of vasoocclusive crisis (VOC) left a history of
stroke
(n = 16) as the main indication for BMT. Among patients treated by genoidentical BMT, 85% were cured and 9% died. All deaths were due to severe
graft-versus-host disease
. The rejection rate fell from 25% to 5% after addition of ATG to the conditioning regimen. BMT reversed some sickle cell disease-related abnormalities: splenic function improved and some cases of osteonecrosis showed a favorable course. Fifteen of 16 patients with a history of
stroke
showed no
stroke
recurrence after BMT, and arterial stenoses improved. BMT should be offered to sickle cell anemia patients with a history of
stroke
if a genoidentical donor is available. To prevent
stroke
-related residual impairment and transfusion-related complications, BMT should be considered early in patients with Doppler or MRI evidence of silent
stroke
associated with cognitive function impairment, failure to respond to hydroxyurea therapy (frequent VOCs, severe anemia and thrombocytosis, multifocal osteonecrosis), or polyerythroalloimmunization. Storage of frozen of cord blood samples from siblings should be considered.
...
PMID:[Results and current indications of bone marrow allograft in sickle cell disease]. 1008 81
Between 1993 and 2000, 24 patients with follicular lymphoma underwent high-dose chemo/radiotherapy and allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT). Median age was 44 years, median interval from diagnosis to HSCT was 24 months and the median number of prior lines of treatment was three. Donor source was HLA matched sibling (23) or matched unrelated donor (one). Conditioning therapy was busulfan based in 22 patients and included total body irradiation in two. All patients received i.v. cyclosporine A and short-course methotrexate for
GVHD
prophylaxis. Nineteen patients are alive, a median of 2.3 years post HSCT. Death occurred due to transplant complications in four patients and one patient died of a
stroke
10 months post HSCT. No patients have relapsed. The overall and progression-free survival was 78% (95% CI 63-97). Allogeneic HSCT for patients with progressive follicular lymphoma is feasible and may result in prolonged disease-free survival.
...
PMID:Allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation for progressive follicular lymphoma. 1209 65
Hematopoietic cell transplantation (HCT) has been used for more 30 years for the treatment of selected malignant and nonmalignant diseases. Traditionally, HCT for hematological disorders has relied on myeloablative conditioning before HLA-identical sibling bone marrow transplantation to correct the underlying hematological defect. Most children with hematological diseases who are referred to HCT have features that portend significant morbidity and early mortality. Among SAA patients who have HLA-identical sibling donors, younger patients with profound pancytopenia might be considered early for HCT. For others who lack sibling donors, patients who receive HCT from alternate sources have generally failed one or more courses of intensive immunosuppressive therapy and remain transfusion-dependent, some with hemosiderosis, red cell alloimmunization, and platelet transfusion refractoriness [44,46,48]. Currently, HCT for SCD is generally restricted to those who have experienced a significant sickle-related complication such as
stroke
, recurrent acute chest syndrome, or recurrent painful episodes [7,13]. In contrast, most reserve HCT in thalassemia for younger, Lucarelli class I, good-risk patients who have HLA-identical sibling donors, and veer away from older, high-risk thalassemics for whom transplantation is a riskier clinical intervention. For groups such as young adults with thalassemia major, HCT might become more widely applicable if its toxicity was reduced. Several approaches undergoing development include reduced-intensity conditioning and attempts to prevent
GVHD
. New methods to reduce the intensity and toxicity of conditioning as well as to use highly purified stem cells with the reduction in
graft versus host disease
may allow for the use of matched unrelated donors or haploidentical donors. This would serve to provide potentially more children who could benefit from stem cell transplantation with donors. These advances will hopefully lead to benefits for the majority of children who lack HLA-identical donors.
...
PMID:New approaches to hematopoietic cell transplantation for hematological diseases in children. 1243 Jun 22
Death receptors (DRs) are a growing family of transmembrane proteins that can detect the presence of specific extracellular death signals and rapidly trigger cellular destruction by apoptosis. Eight human DRs (Fas, TNF-R1, TRAMP, TRAIL-R1, TRAIL-R2, DR-6, EDA-R and NGF-R) have been identified. The best studied to date is Fas (CD95). Expression and signaling by Fas and its ligand (FasL, CD95L) is a tightly regulated process essential for key physiological functions in a variety of organs, including the maintenance of immune homeostasis. Recently, strong evidence has shown that dysregulation of Fas expression and/or signaling contributes to the pathogenesis of tissue destructive diseases such as
graft-versus-host disease
, toxic epidermal necrolysis, multiple sclerosis and
stroke
. With these new developments, strategies for modulating the function of Fas signaling have emerged and provided novel protein-based therapeutic possibilities that will be discussed herein. Selective triggering of DR-mediated apoptosis in cancer cells is an emerging approach that is being intensely investigated as a mode of cancer therapy. Local administration of Fas agonists, and more promisingly, systemic use of soluble recombinant forms of TRAIL have shown efficacy in preclinical models of the disease. Developments in this field that may have important clinical implications for the treatment of cancer are reviewed.
...
PMID:Protein-based therapeutic approaches targeting death receptors. 1265
We present an adaptive Bayesian method for dose-finding in phase I/II clinical trials based on trade-offs between the probabilities of treatment efficacy and toxicity. The method accommodates either trinary or bivariate binary outcomes, as well as efficacy probabilities that possibly are nonmonotone in dose. Doses are selected for successive patient cohorts based on a set of efficacy-toxicity trade-off contours that partition the two-dimensional outcome probability domain. Priors are established by solving for hyperparameters that optimize the fit of the model to elicited mean outcome probabilities. For trinary outcomes, the new algorithm is compared to the method of Thall and Russell (1998, Biometrics 54, 251-264) by application to a trial of rapid treatment for ischemic
stroke
. The bivariate binary outcome case is illustrated by a trial of
graft-versus-host disease
treatment in allogeneic bone marrow transplantation. Computer simulations show that, under a wide rage of dose-outcome scenarios, the new method has high probabilities of making correct decisions and treats most patients at doses with desirable efficacy-toxicity trade-offs.
...
PMID:Dose-finding based on efficacy-toxicity trade-offs. 1533 91
Patients with sickle cell disease (N = 3) and thalassemia (N = 1) with high-risk features received hematopoietic stem cell transplantations (HCT) to induce stable (full or partial) donor engraftment. Patients were 9-30 years of age. Fludarabine, rabbit anti-thymocyte globulin (ATG), and 200 cGy total body irradiation were administered pre-transplant. Patients received bone marrow (N = 3) or peripheral blood stem cells (N = 1) from HLA-identical siblings, followed by mycophenolate mofetil and cyclosporine for post-grafting immunosuppression. Significant lymphopenia, but only moderate neutropenia and thrombocytopenia developed post transplant. No grade IV nonhematological toxicities or acute
graft-versus-host disease
(
GVHD
) were observed. At 3 months after transplantation, three of four patients had evidence of donor myeloid chimerism (range, 15-100%). However, after post transplant immunosuppression was discontinued, graft rejection occurred in all but one patient. This patient is now doing well 27 months post transplant with full donor engraftment. One patient died after a second transplant, and another patient experienced a
stroke
as her graft was being rejected. These results suggest that stable donor engraftment after nonmyeloablative HCT is difficult to achieve among immunocompetent patients with hemoglobinopathies and that new approaches will need to be developed before wider application of this transplantation method for hemoglobinopathies.
...
PMID:Hematopoietic stem cell transplantation for multiply transfused patients with sickle cell disease and thalassemia after low-dose total body irradiation, fludarabine, and rabbit anti-thymocyte globulin. 1553 1
Neurological complications whether due to the uremic state or its treatment, contribute largely to the morbidity and mortality in patients with renal failure. Despite continuous therapeutic advances, many neurological complications of uremia, like uremic encephalopathy, atherosclerosis, neuropathy and myopathy fail to fully respond to dialysis. Moreover, dialytic therapy or kidney transplantation may even induce neurological complications. Dialysis can directly or indirectly be associated with dialysis dementia, dysequilibrium syndrome, aggravation of atherosclerosis, cerebrovascular accidents due to ultrafiltration-related arterial hypotension, hypertensive encephalopathy, Wernicke's encephalopathy, hemorrhagic
stroke
, subdural hematoma, osmotic myelinolysis, opportunistic infections, intracranial hypertension and mononeuropathy. Renal transplantation itself can give rise to acute femoral neuropathy, rejection encephalopathy and neuropathy in
graft versus host disease
. The use of immunosuppressive drugs after renal transplantation can cause encephalopathy, movement disorders, opportunistic infections, neoplasms, myopathy and progression of atherosclerosis. We address the clinical, pathophysiological and therapeutical aspects of both central and peripheral nervous system complications in uremia.
...
PMID:Neurological complications in renal failure: a review. 1556 46
A 44-year-old female developed a catastrophic thrombotic syndrome following allogeneic stem cell transplantation for acute lymphoblastic leukemia. In the context of chronic
graft versus host disease
, she developed a lethal multi-system thrombotic state as evidenced by
stroke
, renal failure and cardiac thrombi in association with elevated anticardiolipin antibody. The case is discussed in the framework of the existing literature and derives clinical practice recommendations for this rare but clinically devastating entity.
...
PMID:Catastrophic antiphospholipid syndrome: atypical presentation in the setting of chronic graft versus host disease: case report and review of the literature. 1575 58
We report outcomes after myeloablative haematopoietic cell transplantation (HCT) from human leucocyte antigen (HLA)-matched sibling donors in 67 patients with sickle cell disease transplanted between 1989 and 2002. The most common indications for transplantation were
stroke
and recurrent vaso-occlusive crisis in 38% and 37% of patients respectively. The median age at transplantation was 10 years and 67% of patients had received >10 red blood cell transfusions before HCT. Twenty-seven percent of patients had a poor performance score at transplantation. Ninety-four percent received busulfan and cyclophosphamide-containing conditioning regimens and bone marrow was the predominant source of donor cells. Most patients achieved haematopoietic recovery and no deaths occurred during the early post-transplant period. Rates of acute and chronic
graft-versus-host disease
were 10% and 22% respectively. Sixty-four of 67 patients are alive with 5-year probabilities of disease-free and overall survival of 85% and 97% respectively. Nine patients had graft failure with recovery of sickle erythropoiesis, eight of who had recurrent sickle-related events. This report confirms and extends earlier reports that HCT from HLA-matched related donors offers a very high survival rate, with few transplant-related complications and the elimination of sickle-related complications in the majority of patients who undergo this therapy.
...
PMID:Matched-related donor transplantation for sickle cell disease: report from the Center for International Blood and Transplant Research. 1745 50
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