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Query: UMLS:C0023467 (
acute myeloid leukemia
)
35,200
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
In the present study the in vitro growth of CFU-GM from PBPC of patients with
AML
(n = 11), purged with mafosfamide alone or a combination of mafosfamide and amifostine, was compared to historical controls of mafosfamide-purged bone marrow (
AML
CR1
, n = 16). Two patients were transplanted with mafosfamide and mafosfamide/amifostine pretreated PBPC autografts. The in vitro experiments demonstrated a significantly higher resistance of peripheral blood derived CFU-GM to mafosfamide (median ID95 190 microg mafosfamide/ml) compared with bone marrow derived CFU-GM (median ID95130 microg/ml). Preincubation with amifostine significantly further increased the median ID95 to 245 microg/ml. The clinical results showed short recovery times for neutrophils >500/microl (9 and 13 days) and platelets >20 000/microl (12 and 21 days) and stable long-term engraftment with one relapse at day +118 and one patient in CR at day 760 after transplantation. The in vitro results show a significant advantage of PBPC over bone marrow-derived progenitors for purging with mafosfamide. Furthermore, a protective effect from mafosfamide of amifostine on normal progenitors could be demonstrated. The clinical results demonstrate the clinical feasibility of using mafosfamide-purged autologous PBPCT without impairing the short-term and long-term repopulating capacities of the autografts.
...
PMID:Purging of G-CSF-mobilized peripheral autografts in acute leukemia with mafosfamide and amifostine to protect normal progenitor cells. 1080 3
In order to compare autologous bone marrow (BMT) and blood cell transplantation (BCT) in patients with
acute myeloid leukemia
(
AML
) in first remission (
CR1
), we retrospectively reviewed the data of 1393 patients registered to EBMT and undergoing either BCT (n = 100), purged (n = 252) or unpurged (n = 1041) BMT. Hematopoietic recovery was significantly quicker after BCT than after either purged or unpurged BMT. The 2-year leukemia-free survival (LFS), relapse incidence (RI) and overall survival for the entire population of patients were 52 +/- 1%, 43 +/- 1% and 58 +/- 1% and were significantly influenced by FAB subtype (M3 vs other) and the intervals between diagnosis and
CR1
or
CR1
and transplant. After BCT, LFS and RI were 44 +/- 6% and 50 +/- 6% and did not differ significantly from that found for unpurged BMT (49 +/- 2% and 45 +/- 2%; P = NS). However, LFS (57 +/- 3%) and RI (37 +/- 3%) of patients undergoing purged BMT were significantly different from that found for BCT patients (P = 0.01 and P = 0.006). As some characteristics of patients undergoing BCT or purged BMT differed significantly (age, intervals between diagnosis and
CR1
or
CR1
and transplant), the better outcome observed for purged BMT over BCT patients needs to be prospectively investigated.
...
PMID:Autologous blood cell vs marrow transplantation for acute myeloid leukemia in complete remission: an EBMT retrospective analysis. 1084 22
One hundred and thirty-one patients were transplanted for
AML
-
CR1
, ALL-
CR1
or CML-CP1 after conditioning with 120 mg/kg body weight cyclophosphamide and 2 x 4.5 Gy TBI. Conditioning was intensified with the addition of 42 mg/m2 idarubicin. Grafts were T cell-depleted using counterflow centrifugation. Donors were HLA-identical siblings. We compared outcome of BMT in 109 patients aged less than 50 (median, 35) years with that of 22 patients with an age of 50 years or more (median, 53 years). For the patients aged <50 years, 2-year probabilities of treatment-related mortality, relapse, survival and leukemia-free survival were 26% (95% CI, 17% to 35%), 26% (95% CI, 17% to 35%), 64% (95% CI, 55% to 73%), and 56% (95% CI, 47% to 65%). For the patients aged > or =50 years, these figures were 13% (95% CI, 0% to 30%), 24% (95% CI, 6% to 42%), 66% (95% CI, 46% to 86%), and 67% (95% CI, 47% to 87%), respectively. Outcome did not differ significantly between the two age groups. TRM was within the range of that reported in the literature for recipients of T cell-depleted grafts. We conclude that T cell-depleted transplantation after a conditioning regimen that was intensified with the addition of idarubicin is feasible in patients aged > or =50 years. For this age group of patients, results of nonmyeloablative regimens should be compared with that obtained with T cell-depleted grafts.
...
PMID:Outcome of T cell-depleted transplantation after conditioning with an intensified regimen in patients aged 50 years or more is comparable with that in younger patients. 1091 1
Pretransplant conditioning therapy with i.v. BuCy followed by allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (BMT) was investigated in a phase II trial in patients with
acute myeloid leukemia
(
AML
) or myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS). We gave i.v. Bu at a dose of 0.8 mg/kg every 6h x 16 doses, followed by Cy 60 mg/kg daily for 2 days. Twenty-six
AML
patients (18 males/eight females) were treated, only eight of whom were in
CR1
. The rest were either refractory to induction chemotherapy (four patients) or in a more advanced stage of their disease (14 patients). In addition, nine patients with MDS (1M/8F) were treated. Their median age was 41 years (range 21-64). Engraftment to > or =500 neutrophils/microl was reached at 14 days (range 10-29 days) post BMT, and the median time of neutropenia was only 11 days (range 4-28 days). The most common regimen-related toxicity was grade 2-3 nausea. In the post-BMT period (including BMT day +30), two patients died, one each from pulmonary hemorrhage secondary to CMV pneumonia and hepatic veno-occlusive disease (VOD), for an early treatment-related mortality (TRM) of 5.7%. Three patients developed VOD and two of them died. There was no direct regimen-related pulmonary or neurologic toxicity. Overall, the clinical side-effect spectrum was analogous to what would be expected from a high-dose oral Bu-based regimen; there was no unique toxicity experienced with the used solvent system. The disease-free survival in the high-risk subgroup (all patients not in
CR1
) at 1 and 2 years post transplant was 44% and 31%, respectively. The 13 patients still alive in CR have been followed for a median of 24 months (range 18-32). Pharmacokinetic analysis showed very good interdose reproducibility, and limited interpatient variability in area under the plasma concentration vs time curve, peak concentration, and clearance of Bu after this i.v. formulation. We conclude, that this new i.v. Bu formulation is well tolerated; it has an impressive safety profile, and we suggest that it should be considered as appropriate replacement for oral busulfan in pretransplant conditioning therapy prior to allogeneic BMT for patients with
AML
or MDS.
...
PMID:Allogeneic stem cell transplantation (BMT) for AML and MDS following i.v. busulfan and cyclophosphamide (i.v. BuCy). 1093 85
The outcome for 39 patients with
acute myeloid leukemia
(
AML
) in remission who had CAMPATH 1M T cell-depleted unrelated donor bone marrow transplantations (BMTs) is described. Conditioning was mainly with cyclophosphamide (120 mg/kg) and total body irradiation (TBI) (14.4 Gy), but 5 patients received busulfan in place of TBI and 200 mg/kg cyclophosphamide. All patients received cyclosporin, and short-course methotrexate was given to recipients of mismatched grafts. The patient population was predominantly pediatric (median age, 10 years), but one third of the patients was aged 15 years or above. Twenty-five patients were in second complete remission (CR2), and 14 had high-risk
CR1
disease (primarily failed remission induction or antecedent myelodysplastic syndrome, often with complex cytogenetic abnormalities). Both recipient and donor were cytomegalovirus seronegative in 15 of 37 cases (38%); 51% of patients were matched for HLA class I and II. Grade II to IV acute graft-versus-host disease (GVHD) occurred in 24% of patients; chronic GVHD occurred in 5 of 31 evaluable patients (16%), 4 extensive and 1 limited. Relapse occurred in 5 cases (13%); 1 of these 5 patients survives, 24 months after a second unrelated donor transplantation. Two of these relapses were associated with secondary graft failure (incidence rate, 5%). All patients engrafted primarily. Severe viral infection was the major transplant-associated complication, with 12 episodes in 9 patients, 5 of them lethal. Twenty-five patients survive at a median follow-up of 44 months (range, 2-102 months), with estimated actuarial overall and disease-free survival rates at 44 months of 61% (SE 8%) and 57% (SE 8%), respectively. Nineteen patients are more than 2 years post-BMT and may be cured. The functional status of long-term survivors is excellent, with 19 of 21 patients who survive 6 months or more in full-time employment or full-time students. These encouraging results suggest that in patients lacking a sibling donor, unrelated donor BMT for
AML
in remission achieves survival figures as good as or better than those reported on patients with autologous stem cell transplantation, and that T-cell depletion of grafts is associated with a low relapse rate and an excellent functional status. However, only a randomized study comparing unrelated donor BMT and auto-grafting will resolve which of these treatment strategies is better for patients with
AML
.
...
PMID:T cell-depleted unrelated donor bone marrow transplantation for acute myeloid leukemia. 1112 16
The purpose of this study was to evaluate the feasibility and efficacy of autologous transplantation of peripheral blood stem cells (PBSC) mobilized with high-dose consolidation chemotherapy and granulocyte colony-stimulating factor in patients with
acute myelogenous leukemia
(
AML
). Twenty patients received myeloablative chemotherapy or chemo-radiotherapy including total body irradiation followed by the infusion of PBSC. PBSC were collected by large-volume leukaphereses. The mean number of mononuclear cells and CD34-positive cells infused were 7.2 x 10(8)/kg (range, 2.2-16.6), and 6.6 x 106/kg (range, 2.1-27.7), respectively. Engraftment failure was not seen in the enrolled patients. The median time to neutrophil (> or = 500/microL) and platelet recovery (> or = 50,000/microL) from the transplant was 12 days (range, 8-20) and 28 days (range, 10-600), respectively. The 2-year probability of disease-free survival (DFS) and relapse were 43% and 57% for patients with
AML
transplanted in first complete remission (
CR1
). The outcome of the patients transplanted in the advanced status was significantly worse than the patients transplanted in
CR1
(P=0.04). Most relapses occurred within 1 year after transplantation. Fatal hepatic veno-occlusive disease was observed in one case. Other transplantation-related toxicities were mild. Our results demonstrated that autologous transplantation of high-dose consolidation chemotherapy-mobilized peripheral blood progenitor cells is feasible in the patients with
AML
in
CR1
. To further reduce the risk of leukemia relapse, much effort should be contributed to the field of ex vivo purging and post-transplant immunotherapy.
...
PMID:Transplantation of peripheral blood stem cells mobilized by intensified consolidation and granulocyte colony-stimulating factor in acute leukemia. 1129 3
Relapse is the major cause of death after allogeneic bone marrow transplantation (BMT). This study tested the hypothesis that the numbers of donor mononuclear cells, lymphocytes, and CD34(+) cells influence relapse and event-free survival (EFS) after BMT. The study population consisted of 113 consecutive patients with hematologic malignancies who underwent non-T-cell-depleted BMT from HLA-matched siblings. Sixty-four patients had low-risk diagnoses (ALL/
AML
CR1
, MDS RA/RARS, and CML CP1); 49 patients had high-risk diagnoses (all others). CD34(+) cells, T cells, B cells, natural killer cells, monocytes, and a rare population of CD3(-), CD4(bright) cells in the allografts were measured by flow cytometry. The CD3(-), CD4(bright) cells in bone marrow had the same frequency and phenotype as CD123(bright) type 2 dendritic cell (DC) progenitors, and they differentiated into typical DCs after short-term culture. Cox regression analyses evaluated risk strata, age, gender, and the numbers of nucleated cells, CD3(+) T cells, CD34(+) hematopoietic cells, and CD4(bright) cells as covariates for EFS, relapse, and nonrelapse mortality. Recipients of larger numbers of CD4(bright) cells had significantly lower EFS, a lower incidence of chronic graft-versus-host disease (cGVHD), and an increased incidence of relapse. Recipients of larger numbers of CD34(+) cells had improved EFS; recipients of fewer CD34(+) cells had delayed hematopoietic engraftment and increased death from infections. In conclusion, the content of donor CD4(bright) cells was associated with decreased cGVHD and graft-versus-leukemia effects in recipients of allogeneic bone marrow transplantation, consistent with a role for donor DCs in determining immune responses after allogeneic BMT.
...
PMID:Larger numbers of CD4(bright) dendritic cells in donor bone marrow are associated with increased relapse after allogeneic bone marrow transplantation. 1134 16
Leukaemic patients with advanced disease and severe fungal infections as well as older patients with substantial co-morbidity are usually excluded from conventional allotransplantation because of increased morbidity and mortality. We approached allogeneic transplantation in four patients with a median age of 62 years (one chronic myeloid leukaemia in blast crisis, one high-risk
acute myeloid leukaemia
(
AML
) in first complete remission (
CR1
), one
AML
in 2nd relapse, one
AML
in CR2 with pre-existing fungal lung infections (two aspergillus, two mucor) and additional co-morbidity (diabetes n = 2, aortic aneurysm n = 1, arterial sclerosis n = 2) by combining non-myeloablative conditioning with an intensified supportive care regimen, including amphotericin B and 4-12 (median 9) prophylactic granulocyte transfusions from granulocyte colony-stimulating factor (G-CSF)-stimulated volunteer donors. G-CSF was also given to patients until neutrophil recovery. All four patients recovered to a neutrophil count of 0.5 x 109/l after a median of 11.5 d (range 11-13 d). Prophylactic granulocyte transfusions also reduced the need for platelet transfusions and minimized mucositis. All patients were discharged at a median of 25 d (range 18-59 d) and are alive and well after a median follow-up of > 390 d (range 336-417 d) without evidence of leukaemia. Regression of the fungal lesions was documented in three patients, with a slight progression detected by computerized tomography scan of the chest in one patient. We conclude that pulmonary fungal infections are not a contraindication for allogeneic stem cell transplantation, if non-myeloablative conditioning regimens are used in combination with granulocyte transfusions, intravenous amphotericin B and G-CSF.
...
PMID:Older patients with high-risk fungal infections can be successfully allografted using non-myeloablative conditioning in combination with intensified supportive care regimens. 1138 Apr 15
A hundred and eight patients less than 60 years old with de novo
acute myeloid leukemia
were treated between 1982 and 1994 by protocols including final intensification with a transplant using autologous bone marrow purged by mafosfamide in first remission in the absence of an HLA-matched sibling donor available for allograft. From 1989, we attempted to improve tumor control by using high-dose anthracyclines in induction, by increasing from one to two the number of consolidation courses pre-transplant and by introducing intermediate doses of cytarabine in the first consolidation course. The CR rate was 77% (33/43) before 1989 and 90% (59/65) after 1989 (P = 0.06). Forty-five out of the 59 patients (76%) who achieved CR after 1989 could undergo bone marrow grafting in
CR1
vs 16/33 (48%) before 1989 (P = 0.01). In spite of the higher proportion of patients above 50 years after 1989 (32%) toxicity was mild and an adequate graft was obtained more frequently after one collection. The principal factor relating to improvement in graft feasibility was the post-1989 modification of induction and consolidation regimens. This improvement in graft feasibility was associated with a better disease-free survival (DFS) (48 +/- 7% vs 32 +/- 8%, P = 0.04) and overall survival (OS) (53 +/- 6% vs 30 +/- 7%, P = 0.007) at 5 years. By multivariate analysis four factors were associated with overall survival (OS): karyotype, white blood cell count at diagnosis, treatment regimen and bone marrow grafting in
CR1
. This global approach should be prospectively compared with intensive chemotherapy.
...
PMID:Improved efficiency of remission induction facilitates autologous BMT harvesting and improves overall survival in adults with AML: 108 patients treated at a single institution. 1143 19
This retrospective study from the Italian Association of Pediatric Hematology Oncology-Bone Marrow Transplant Group (AIEOP-TMO) reports the results of consolidation with high-dose melphalan and autologous hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (auto-HSCT) in patients with
acute myeloid leukemia
(
AML
) in first complete remission (
CR1
). From October 1994 to July 1999, 20 patients (median age 9.9 years, range 0.11-16.2) were treated in six centers. Eighteen had de novo
AML
and two had secondary AML. According to BFM criteria, 10 were classified as standard- and 10 as high-risk patients, respectively. The median time from diagnosis to
CR1
and from diagnosis to Auto-HSCT were 1.1 months (range 0.8-1.6) and 4.3 months (range 3.1-6.2), respectively. Purging with either mafosfamide (three) or in vivo interleukin-2 (four) was performed in seven of 20 patients. Melphalan was administered at a dosage of 150-220 mg/m(2) (median 180). Median total number of nucleated cells infused was 2.5 x 10(8)/kg (range 1.1-8.9). The myeloablative regimen was well tolerated with no toxic death, veno-occlusive disease or life-threatening complications. All patients had hematopoietic recovery in a median time of 27 days for neutrophils and 44 days for platelets. Eight of 20 patients relapsed after a median time of 7.2 months from transplant (range 5.7-15.9). Six of them died (five of progression of disease and one of sepsis) while the remaining two patients are alive in CR2. The 3-year cumulative probability of survival and event-free-survival (EFS) is 62% and 56%, respectively. This study showed that in pediatric patients with
AML
consolidation of
CR1
with high-dose melphalan allows survival and EFS to be obtained comparable to other auto-HSCT or chemotherapy published series with a potential sparing effect both on duration of treatment (with respect to chemotherapy) and on long-term side-effects (with respect to auto-HSCT with TBI or busulfan containing regimens).
...
PMID:High-dose melphalan with autologous hematopoietic stem cell transplantation for acute myeloid leukemia: results of a retrospective analysis of the Italian Pediatric Group for Bone Marrow Transplantation. 1150 30
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