Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0023418 (leukemia)
93,477 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Bone marrow transplantation from an HLA-identical sibling is increasingly used as a curative therapy for patients with hemopoietic stem cell disorders including acute leukemia, chronic myelogenous leukemia and severe aplastic anemia. Between March 1983 and March 1991, we performed 86 cases of allogeneic bone marrow transplantation (BMT) for the patients with hemopoietic stem cell disorders: 25 acute myelogenous leukemia (AML); 15 acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL); 20 chronic myelogenous leukemia (CML); and 26 severe aplastic anemia (SAA). Ten out of 25 AML are in disease free survival (DFS). The causes of death were recurrence of leukemia (12), acute GVHD (3), sepsis (1) and veno-occlusive disease (1). Nine of 15 ALL are in unmaintained remission. Thirteen out of 20 CML are in DFS. Among 26 SAA, 21 are enjoying DFS, but 1 died of engraftment failure, 3 of graft rejection followed by cytomegalovirus (1) and aspergillus pneumonia (1). Comparing the survival between standard [less than or equal to CR1: 9/14 (64%)] and high risk [greater than or equal to CR1: 1/11 (9%)] AML, our data suggest that preparative regimen for high risk AML was not potent enough to eradicate the minimal residual disease in advanced AML. Although our cases are limited and the follow-up period is short, our result of ALL [overall: CCR (60%), standard risk (adult less than or equal to CR1, children less than or equal to CR2; 8/11 (73%) and high risk; 1/4 (25%)] and CML [overall: 65%, CP; 9/10 (90%), AP; 4/6 (67%), BP; 0/4 (0%)] are optimistic. It is of our interest that the incidence of death related with IP (1/33: 3%) and with AGVHD 94/33: 12%) were much less than that of other's observation but the explanation for this still remains to be clear.
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PMID:Allogeneic bone marrow transplantation for the patients with hemopoietic stem cell disorders: CUMC experience. 151 32

We report successful pregnancies in two young women (aged 24 and 20 years) following allogeneic bone marrow transplantation (BMT) for acute non-lymphoblastic leukaemia. Conditioning therapy consisted of cyclophosphamide (120 mg/kg) and total body irradiation (TBI, 12 Gy) in 2 Gy fractions once daily for 6 days or twice daily for 3 days. Graft-versus-host disease prophylaxis was with methotrexate alone. Both women were amenorrhoeic after BMT and gonadal testing indicated hypergonadotrophic hypogonadism. Both women had normal pregnancies (2 years and 5 years after BMT) resulting in normal healthy infants. Previously successful pregnancy has been reported after TBI in three women in whom the TBI dose was less than 8 Gy. Our cases illustrate that normal outcome of pregnancy is possible at even higher doses of TBI.
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PMID:Successful pregnancy after total body irradiation and bone marrow transplantation for acute leukaemia. 151 86

A total of 239 patients with chronic myeloid leukaemia (CML) in chronic phase awaiting bone marrow transplantation (BMT) from an HLA-identical sibling donor were randomized to receive, as part of their conditioning, splenic irradiation (SI+) or no splenic irradiation (SI-). There was no difference between the SI+ and SI- groups regarding the distribution of age, sex, donor/recipient sex combination and blood counts at diagnosis and at BMT. Survival, leukaemia-free survival (LFS), incidence of transplant-related mortality, incidence of rejection and probability of relapse do not differ between the 117 SI+ and the 118 SI- patients at a median follow-up time of 2.5 years (minimum 0.5 years). LFS at 30 months is 56% (SE 5%) for the SI+ and 51% (SE 6%) for the SI- group (p = 0.65). LFS is better for younger patients (less than 25 years), for patients without T cell depletion and for those with a low white blood cell count at diagnosis (less than 30 x 10(9)/l) (p less than 0.05). It is worst for male recipients of a female marrow (p less than 0.05). The incidence of graft-versus-host disease grade greater than or equal to II was higher in the SI+ group, though not significantly. We conclude that routine splenic irradiation prior to BMT for patients with CML is of no benefit and should not be used as a routine procedure.
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PMID:No advantage for patients who receive splenic irradiation before bone marrow transplantation for chronic myeloid leukaemia: results of a prospective randomized study. 152 4

Despite major advances, graft-versus-host disease (GVHD) remains a major obstacle to clinical bone marrow transplantation. Prophylaxis by T cell depletion is associated with increased rates of engraftment failure and leukemic relapse. Treatment with high-dose IL-2 can markedly protect lethally irradiated mice from GVHD-related mortality, especially when T cell-depleted (TCD) syngeneic bone marrow cells (BMC) are co-administered. In these IL-2-protected animals, allogeneic reconstitution is observed, and a graft-versus-leukemia effect of allogeneic T cells is preserved. To determine whether IL-2 might increase alloresistance under conditions in which alloengraftment is more difficult to achieve, we have now evaluated the possible effect of IL-2 on: (1) competitive repopulation of lethally irradiated mice by mixtures of TCD allogeneic and TCD syngeneic BMC; (2) radiation protection by TCD allogeneic BMC; (3) timing of hematologic recovery; and (4) allogeneic engraftment in sublethally irradiated recipients. The results show that IL-2 has only a limited and strain-restricted effect on alloengraftment. This effect may reflect activation of alloresistant host natural killer cells, a cell population which is not essential for the protective effect of IL-2 against GVHD.
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PMID:Alloengraftment in IL-2-treated mice. 152 5

The association of graft-versus-host disease (GVHD) with lower relapse rates following allogeneic bone marrow transplantation (BMT) in humans led us to analyse post HLA-identical BMT derived anti-host cytotoxic T cells (CTL) for their putative anti-leukemic activity. To establish whether graft-versus-host (GVH) and graft-versus-leukemia (GVL) activities are separate, CTL lines were generated at different time points post-BMT from three patients suffering from acute GVHD. These CTL lines, which exhibited lysis of host normal lymphocytes and neoplastic cells, were analysed at the clonal level. Three functionally different types of clones were characterized: clones directed at host specific minor Histocompatibility (mH) antigens which are shared by patient's peripheral blood lymphocytes (PBL) and leukemic cells; clones recognizing only host PBL but not host leukemic cells; and putative GVL clones directed at patient's neoplastic cells only. These data could explain the long controversies on dissection of GVH and GVL activities. Our results demonstrate that GVH and GVL activities can be dissected, while non-separable effector cells which exhibit both activities do exist as well.
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PMID:In vitro separation of host specific graft-versus-host and graft-versus-leukemia cytotoxic T cell activities. 152 8

The results of pretransplant mixed leukocyte culture (MLC) assays were compared to subsequent risk of graft-versus-host disease (GVHD) in 783 patients receiving marrow transplants from HLA genotypically identical sibling donors. The mean MLC response observed between 1303 normal HLA identical sibling pairs was 0.0 +/- 4.2% RR. The donor anti-recipient MLC reaction, an in vitro response that presumably might be relevant to GVHD, was significantly increased (greater than mean + 2 sd) in 83 (10.6%) of the cases, most often in patients in relapse at the time of testing. No association was found, however, between this increased donor anti-recipient MLC reactivity pretransplant and the incidence or severity of subsequent acute or chronic GVHD. These data suggest that the increased MLC responses sometimes observed between leukemia patients and their HLA identical sibling donors prior to marrow transplantation do not represent genetic differences capable of causing GVHD.
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PMID:Mixed leukocyte culture reactivity and graft-versus-host disease in HLA-identical marrow transplantation for leukemia. 843 17

The presence of two distinct T-cell receptors (TCR) alpha/beta and gamma/delta dimers as well as of the activated T cells was analysed in peripheral blood mononuclear cells from seventeen recipients of allogeneic bone marrow transplants for leukemia and for severe aplastic anemia. Nine of seventeen recipients expressed an elevated percentage of T cells bearing TCR gamma/delta receptors in their peripheral blood. Seven out of nine cases having elevated gamma/delta positive cells showed chronic graft-versus-host (GVH) disease; one patient was treated with Cyclosporin A, and one patient was asymptomatic. In the twelve patients with GVH or other clinical symptoms, activated T cells (CD3+/HLA-DR+) were elevated indicating an autoreactive or alloreactive cell population. Our results confirmed earlier in vitro data showing that TCR-gamma/delta-bearing lymphocytes may be an activated T-cell population, and this T cell subset might be involved in mediating GVH disease, or in prolonging immunodeficiency after transplantation.
Leukemia 1992
PMID:TCR gamma/delta bearing lymphocytes in peripheral blood of allogenic bone marrow transplanted patients. 153 60

Recent studies performed in Seattle, USA have suggested that pretransplant assignment of high or low donor alloreactivity may predict acute graft-versus-host disease (aGvHD) after allogeneic HLA identical marrow transplantation for acute leukaemia. The effect of such pretransplant assignment was studied in a Scandinavian population of 114 consecutive transplantations for acute and chronic leukaemias in 1st remission (n = 74) or chronic phase (n = 40) performed between 1975 and 1989. The selected cut-off value for discriminating between donors of high and low responding capacity (DRC) was based on distribution plots of results from the pretransplant mixed lymphocyte culture (MLC) and chosen as the median value (80% normalized response). Then 57 donors were assigned with high DRC and 57 donors assigned with low DRC. Kaplan-Meier estimates of the probability of patients to develop Grade II or higher aGvHD in receipt of high or low responder donor transplants were compared by univariant analysis. The patients in first remission or chronic phase transplanted with bone marrow from donors assigned as high or low responders had a 36.1% and 10.6% risk for aGvHD, respectively, a difference found to be significant by log rank test (chi-squared = 10.1, d.f. = 1, P = 0.0015). Subsequent studies of the cellular and humoral requirements for this predictive response of donor cells, by blocking with cytokine specific antibodies, addition of excess of recombinant human cytokines and scanning of lymphocyte subsets during the response, showed that the response against pool cells mostly depended upon IL-2 responding cells with the phenotype CD3+, CD4+, CD8-, CD25+, CD16-. It is concluded that prospective studies of alloreactivity as a risk factor should be performed to confirm the above findings.
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PMID:A study of donor alloreactivity, which may predict acute graft-versus-host disease in HLA identical bone marrow transplantations for early leukaemia. 153 90

Between July 1986 and March 1991, 16 patients who had relapsed after T-lymphocyte depleted bone marrow transplantation (BMT) for chronic myeloid leukaemia (CML) received a second transplant using unmanipulated marrow cells from the same HLA-identical sibling donor. The median numbers of days from first BMT to haematological relapse and to second BMT were 557 (range 273-1543) and 1211 (range 476-2310) respectively. 11 patients were in uncomplicated chronic phase at time of second BMT, and five had more advanced disease. As conditioning for second BMT, eight patients received various combinations of cytotoxic drugs, and eight received high-dose busulphan alone. Eight (50%) patients survive at a median of 424 d post-second BMT (range 158-1789) and all are free of leukaemia by conventional criteria: five had been conditioned with high-dose busulphan alone. Causes of death in the eight patients who died included relapse (n = 2), graft-versus-host disease (n = 2), interstitial pneumonitis (n = 2), and infection (n = 2). We conclude that patients relapsing into chronic phase after BMT with T-lymphocyte depleted donor marrow may be offered the option of second BMT with unmanipulated marrow from the original donor. Conditioning with high-dose busulphan alone may be safer than use of more intensive schedules.
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PMID:Second transplants for patients with chronic myeloid leukaemia in relapse after original transplant with T-depleted donor marrow: feasibility of using busulphan alone for re-conditioning. 153 8

Nineteen patients with leukaemia, preleukaemia, and aplastic anaemia were treated by marrow transplantation from HLA-identical siblings. All were given postgrafting immunosuppression with a combination of methotrexate (days 1, 3, 6 and 11) and cyclosporin (days--1 to 180). In an attempt at reducing cyclosporin-associated toxicity, we explored whether the cyclosporin dose during the first 2 weeks could be decreased by 50% (from 3.0 to 1.5 mg/kg/d intravenously) without adversely affecting the incidence, onset, and severity of acute graft-versus-host disease (GVHD) and overall survival. Results from this pilot study were compared to those of a matched cohort of 38 patients given a standard dose of 3.0 mg cyclosporin/kg/d starting on day--1. The cumulative incidence of grade II and III acute GVHD in the 'low dose' cyclosporin group was 42% compared to 51% in the 'standard dose' group (P = 0.60). Three-year survival was 63% and 54% respectively (P = 0.59). Patients receiving the reduced cyclosporin dose during the first 14 d appeared to have less hepatotoxicity, and the methotrexate and cyclosporin doses administered were closer to the doses intended per protocol. We suggest that 'low dose' cyclosporin from day--1 to day 15 postgrafting might be as effective as 'standard dose' cyclosporin during that time period for the prevention of acute GVHD.
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PMID:A pilot study of low-dose cyclosporin for graft-versus-host prophylaxis in marrow transplantation. 153 9


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