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Query: UMLS:C0023467 (
acute myeloid leukemia
)
35,200
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Acute promyelocytic leukemia (APL) is characterized by a specific gene rearrangement and the generation of the PML-RARalpha fusion transcript which results from a translocation between chromosomes 15 and 17. Targeted therapy with all-trans retinoic acid (ATRA) and anthracycline-based chemotherapy results in an apparent cure in 70-80% of patients. Both allogeneic (ALLO) and autologous (AUTO) hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT) are effective in
acute myeloid leukemia
(
AML
), but their role in APL is not clear given the excellent outcome with ATRA and chemotherapy. Several retrospective studies have analyzed the outcome of patients undergoing AUTO or ALLO-HSCT in first (
CR1
) or second (CR2) complete remission. Most of these studies have shown significant transplant-related mortality (TRM) with ALLO-HSCT, but a reduction in relapse rate compared with AUTO-HSCT. The high TRM with ALLO-HSCT and the excellent outcome with ATRA and chemotherapy do not justify recommending this procedure for the majority of patients in
CR1
. The role of AUTO-HSCT in
CR1
also is unclear. A small subset of patients at high risk of relapse, possibly identifiable by a high white blood cell count at presentation may benefit from HSCT. Most patients with relapsed disease achieve CR2 with ATRA, arsenic trioxide, or combination therapy. However, it is not known if these responses are sustained or if consolidation with HSCT has a place in this setting. The outcome of AUTO-HSCT in CR2 using stem cells that are negative for PML-RARalpha is excellent. It is unclear whether ALLO-HSCT from an HLA-identical sibling is superior to AUTO-HSCT with PML-RARalpha-negative cells in CR2 since the former would be associated with graft-versus-leukemia effects and the latter with lower TRM. Alternatively, arsenic trioxide or re-treatment with ATRA, followed by intensive chemotherapy may also be effective. A randomized prospective clinical trial, or a retrospective analysis of the available data would be useful in answering this critical question.
...
PMID:The role of bone marrow transplantation in acute promyelocytic leukemia. 1153 88
An allogeneic transplantation of CD34(+)-selected cells from peripheral blood (allo-PBT/CD34(+)) from HLA-identical sibling donors was performed in 50 adult patients with
acute myeloid leukemia
in first complete remission (
AML
CR1
) (n = 29), myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS) (n = 4), or chronic myeloid leukemia in first chronic phase (CML CP1) (n = 17). Clinical results were compared to a concurrent group of 50 patients transplanted with unmodified peripheral blood progenitor cells (allo-PBT), matched for age, diagnosis, and disease stage. The median follow-up period was 29 months (range 1-69). The actuarial probability of developing acute GVHD clinical grade II to IV was 16% (95%CI: 6-26) for the allo-PBT/CD34(+) group and 41% (95%CI: 29-57) for the allo-PBT group (P = 0.002). The actuarial probability of developing extensive chronic GVHD was 22% (95%CI: 8-36) for the allo-PBT/CD34(+) group and 47% (95%CI: 31-63) for the allo-PBT group (P = 0.02). Recipients of allo-PBT/CD34(+) had less toxicity associated with the transplant and better Karnofsky index at the last follow-up. For AML/MDS patients, the actuarial probability of disease-free survival (DFS) for recipients of allo-PBT/CD34(+) and allo-PBT was 65% (95%CI: 45-85) vs43% (95%CI: 28-58) (P = 0.05), respectively. These data provide a rationale for a randomised trial of allo-PBT/CD34(+) vs allo-PBT in AML/MDS patients in early stage of the disease.
...
PMID:Allogeneic transplantation of CD34+-selected cells from peripheral blood in patients with myeloid malignancies in early phase: a case control comparison with unmodified peripheral blood transplantation. 1157 6
It has been widely accepted that patients in first remission of
acute myeloid leukemia
(
AML
) with a donor should receive an allograft, and many also believe that autologous transplantation is the next best option. Several factors cast doubt on these assumptions. For example, it is understood that patients who receive transplants are already selected to be at lower risk of relapse, and in addition the risk of relapse varies considerably among patients. This can be predicted by several risk factors, the most powerful of which is cytogenetics. Major collaborative group trials have attempted to evaluate the contribution of autograft and allograft to
AML
treatment in
CR1
. The EORTC-GIEMEMA, GOELAM, UK MRC, and US Intergroup trials randomized approximately 1200 patients to autograft versus, or in addition to, chemotherapy. Although relapse risk was reduced in all studies, overall survival was not better in three of the trials. Only the MRC trial showed a survival benefit, but only in patients beyond 2 years of follow-up. Patients in these trials for whom donors were available were allocated to allogeneic transplant. This enabled the evaluation of allograft in a donor versus no donor (intent-to-treat) analysis. No study showed a survival benefit for the donor arm, although there was a substantial reduction in relapse risk. Analysis within risk groups suggests that transplantation for good-risk patients is not appropriate and the role of transplantation is uncertain in other groups.
...
PMID:Evaluating the contribution of allogeneic and autologous transplantation to the management of acute myeloid leukemia in adults. 1158 68
Autologous stem cell transplantation (ASCT) as well as allogeneic stem cell transplantation and conventional chemotherapy (CT) are less effective at treating acute lymphocytic leukemia (ALL) than
acute myelocytic leukemia
(
AML
). Chemoresistance and late relapses are hallmarks of ALL. In this context, the question of whether ASCT is superior to CT remains unanswered. In vitro marrow purging using monoclonal antibodies is not routinely used. This review summarizes the results of ASCT for adult and childhood ALL. Statistics from the European Group for Blood and Marrow Transplantation reveal a transplant-related mortality at 5 years of 11% +/- 1%, a relapse incidence of 60% +/- 2%, and a leukemia-free survival (LFS) and overall survival (OS) of 36% +/- 2% and 42% +/- 2%, respectively in 1,366 adults autografted in first remission (
CR1
). In 269 children, the LFS and OS were 50% +/- 3% and 54% +/- 3%, respectively. There was no evidence in favor of purging the autograft in vitro. In contrast, multicentric and single-institution studies have found better results in adults autografted in
CR1
, with LFS at 5 years from 46% to 64%, possible efficacy of marrow in vitro purging with mafosfamide (LFS 52%), and improvement in outcome with additional measures post-ASCT, such as maintenance chemotherapy (LFS 57%). Further, as already observed for
AML
, analyses by risk groups suggest that ASCT may essentially benefit good- but not poor-risk patients. For patients with the Ph1/bcr-abl translocation, the role of STI571 anti-tyrosine kinase for in vivo purging before stem cell harvesting is being investigated.
...
PMID:Autologous stem cell transplantation in acute lymphocytic leukemia. 1179 17
Using red cell phenotyping (RCP) and/or cytogenetics (CYT) we identified 19 patients with persisting mixed chimerism (MC) among 231 patients transplanted with partially T cell-depleted stem cell grafts from HLA-identical siblings. Persisting MC is defined as MC for more than 2 years in patients without any evidence of relapse. Median leukemia-free survival in these patients was 150 (range, 50-218) months. Diagnoses were ALL (n= 10);
AML
(n = 2); CML (n = 2); NHL (n = 2); MDS (n= 1); MM (n = 1) and SAA (n = 1). Purpose of this study was the long-term follow-up of MC and definition of patterns of chimerism in the various subsets of PBMCs and granulocytes. Using a PCR-STR technique CD3(+)/CD4(+) (T4 lymphocytes), CD3(+)/CD8(+) (T8 lymphocytes), CD45(+)/CD19(+) (B lymphocytes), CD45(+)/CD14(+) (monocytes), CD45(+)/CD15(+) (granulocytes) and CD3(-)/CD56(+) (NK-cells) were analyzed. The majority of patients with persisting MC were conditioned with a less intensive conditioning regimen and had little GVHD. Sequential monitoring of the chimerism resulted in a group of patients (n = 7) with very slow transient mixed chimerism that resulted in complete DC after median 7 years. Another nine patients had a relatively high percentage of persisting autologous cells for a median of 12 years and in three patients we observed a stable low percentage of autologous cells. Only two out of 19 patients (
AML
-
CR1
, CML-CP1) relapsed during follow-up. Both patients had a relatively high percentage of autologous cells. Chimerism in granulocytes and PBMC subsets was analyzed at a median of 8 years after SCT in nine patients. In five patients mixed chimerism simultaneously detected by RCP and CYT was associated with MC in all subsets. Within each individual patient the percentages of donor and recipient cells were very different between the different subsets. Two CML-CP1 patients were mixed chimera in only two subsets and in one patient these subsets represented pending relapse. In another two patients mixed chimerism with a very low number of autologous red cells was not found in the PBMCs because of the different sensitivity level of the RCP and the PCR-STR technique. We conclude that in patients with persisting mixed chimerism after partially T cell-depleted SCT a remarkable number of patients had lymphoid malignancies, the majority of the patients were conditioned with less intensive conditioning regimens and the mixed chimerism was not correlated with relapse. Chimerism in granulocytes and PBMC subsets did show great intra-individual differences in the subsets and these data correlated well with RCP and CYT data with the exception of the NK cells.
...
PMID:Long-term follow-up of persisting mixed chimerism after partially T cell-depleted allogeneic stem cell transplantation. 1184 Feb 58
For children with
AML
in
CR1
, the major consolidation therapies are BMT, ABMT and intensive chemotherapy. The relative effectiveness of these strategies is still debated. We conducted a systematic review and meta-analysis of trials to determine the effectiveness of BMT and ABMT in
CR1
in paediatric
AML
. Eligible studies enrolled patients <21 years from 1985 to 2000 with
AML
in
CR1
. Two groups of studies were identified: (1) Those comparing the outcome of patients with and without a histocompatible family donor; and (2) Randomised controlled trials (RCT) comparing ABMT with non-myeloablative chemotherapy. The relative risk statistic was calculated for outcomes of interest in each trial. If there was no excessive heterogeneity between trials the results were pooled, and an overall relative risk and risk difference for treatment effect across trials were calculated. Results of the analysis showed that allocation to BMT reduced risk of relapse and improved disease-free and overall survival. For ABMT, heterogeneity of effect between RCTs prevented pooling of results. In conclusion, BMT from a histocompatible family donor improves patient outcome. Data are insufficient to determine whether this is true for all subgroups of
AML
, and whether ABMT is superior to non-myeloablative chemotherapy. An individual patient data meta-analysis is required to further evaluate the available data.
...
PMID:Bone marrow transplantation for paediatric AML in first remission: a systematic review and meta-analysis. 1205 34
Between January 1987 and January 1997, 69 eligible patients with
acute myeloid leukaemia
(
AML
) in either second (CR2) or third (CR3) complete remission (CR2 = 60, CR3 = 9) underwent 4-hydroperoxycyclophosphamide-purged autologous bone marrow transplantation (BMT) at the Johns Hopkins Oncology Center. The patients' median age was 27 years (range 1-62) and all received busulphan and cyclophosphamide as their preparative regimen. The probability of event-free survival (EFS) at 5 years was 30% [95% Confidence Interval (CI): 19-42%] for CR2 patients and 22% (3-51%) for those in CR3, with a median follow up of 8 years in the surviving group. The median time to an absolute neutrophil count of 0.5 x 109/l was 45 d (range 20-185). Relapse was the major cause of failure with a relapse rate of 55% in CR2 and 44% in CR3, while the non-relapse, transplant-related mortality rate was 15% in CR2 and 33% in CR3. In univariate analysis, patient age, cytogenetics, white blood cell count at presentation,
CR1
duration and the sensitivity of clonogeneic leukaemia (CFU-L) in the graft to 4HC were all prognostic for EFS. Using each of these significant variables in multivariate modelling, patient age and sensitivity of CFU-L to 4HC were determined to be predictors of EFS. 4HC-purged autologous BMT produced results similar to allogeneic BMT for
AML
patients beyond first remission.
...
PMID:Autologous bone marrow transplantation with 4-hydroperoxycyclophosphamide purging for acute myeloid leukaemia beyond first remission: a 10-year experience. 1206 Jan 30
In
acute myeloblastic leukemia
(
AML
) the follow-up of minimal residual disease (MRD) has focused on specific chromosomal aberrations (e.g. t(15;17), t(8;21), inv16/t(16;16)) mostly employing reverse transcriptase-PCR. High or increasing levels of MRD are associated with an increased risk of relapse but low levels may persist in patients with prolonged or even durable remission. In adult patients with
AML
the increased risk of relapse has also been demonstrated using flow cytometry and fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH). We evaluated the presence of MRD among pediatric patients with
AML
during and after the cessation of therapy. We were able to establish a clonal marker for the follow-up in 80% of our cases; 11 of the 15 with a clonal marker had detectable MRD at some point during follow-up while 4/15 relapsed 12-14 months after diagnosis. In two there was hematological relapse preceded by an increase in their FISH-detectable number of clonal cells. In 7 of the 11 remaining in
CR1
there were small (< 1%) numbers of clonal cells detectable at one or more time-points. Out of the group of 15 pediatric patients with
AML
, 12 are currently alive in CCR with a median follow-up of 44 months (range 7-63 months). Our data establish the role of metaphase-FISH in the follow-up of
AML
in children and emphasize the importance of an increasing level of MRD in predicting a relapse. Yet, low and stable levels of marrow MRD a ppear compatible with CCR.
...
PMID:Follow-up of minimal residual disease in pediatric acute myeloblastic leukemia using metaphase-FISH. 1215 94
Cytogenetic abnormalities detected at diagnosis are recognized as important in predicting response to chemotherapy in
acute myeloid leukemia
(
AML
). However, there is controversy concerning the prognostic significance of karyotype for outcome after allogeneic bone marrow transplantation (allo-BMT) performed in first complete remission (
CR1
). This single-institution report describes allo-BMT for
AML
in
CR1
and the effect of diagnostic cytogenetic findings on the results of that treatment. Between August 1981 and December 1999, 93 patients underwent related donor (n = 82) or unrelated donor (n = 11) BMT. Conditioning and GVHD prophylaxis were achieved predominantly with busulfan and cyclophosphamide and with cyclosporine and methotrexate, respectively. Seventy-nine (85%) of 93 patients had successful marrow karyotyping at diagnosis, and the patients were categorized into 3 prognostic groups based on the British Medical Research Council
AML
10 trial classification: 15 patients(19%) were classified as having favorable risk [inv(16), t(8;2 1), t(15;17)]; 55 (70%) as having intermediate risk [no abnormality, +8, +21, +22, del(7q), del(9q), 11q23 rearrangement, and other numerical or structural abnormalities]; and 9 (11%) as having adverse risk [-5, del(5q), -7, 3q rearrangements, > or = 5 abnormalities, t(6;9), t(9;22)]. The median follow-up was 93 months (range, 16-241 months). The overall survival (OS) rate, event-free survival (EFS) rate, relapse rate, and treatment-related mortality (TRM) were not statistically different between the groups. The 5-year actuarial EFS rates for favorable, intermediate, and adverse risk groups were 58% (95% confidence interval [CI], 29%-79%), 58% (95% CI, 43%-70%), and 67% (95% CI 28%-88%), respectively. Reclassification of patients into cytogenetic prognostic subgroups according to Southwest Oncology Group criteria did not change these results. In univariate analysis, the only variable found to have a prognostic influence on OS (P = .04) and TRM (P = .03) was the type of donor (unrelated donor was linked to a worse prognosis), which was confirmed in multivariate analysis. Our study suggests that presentation karyotype has less prognostic significance for outcome following allo-BMT than for outcome following conventional chemotherapy. In particular,
AML
patients with poor prognostic cytogenetic changes in
CR1
who are unlikely to be cured with chemotherapy alone may benefit from allo-BMT.
...
PMID:Influence of cytogenetic abnormalities on outcome after allogeneic bone marrow transplantation for acute myeloid leukemia in first complete remission. 1223 69
Few experiences of peripheral blood (PB) hematopoietic stem cell mobilization for autologous transplantation have been reported to date in children with acute leukemia (AL). The five-drug-chemotherapy 'DIAVE' (dexamethazone, idarubicine, cytosine-arabinoside, vincristine, etoposide), followed by G-CSF, previously reported as consolidation, was adopted as a mobilization regimen in 29 children (median age: 8 years, range: 3-21; median weight: 34 kg, range: 15-73) with ALL in second remission (CR2: 21), in CR3 (2) or
ANLL
in
CR1
(6). A median peak of 94 x 10(6) CD34(+)cells/l (range: 10-604) was reached at a median time of 12 days (range: 10-18) after the beginning of the mobilizing regimen, which was well tolerated. A median of 10.9 x 10(6) CD34(+)cells/kg (range: 2.4-56.6) were collected in 25 patients (86%), approaching 40 x 10(6)/l CD34(+) cells in the PB (ALL in CR2: 20/21, in CR3: 0/2;
ANLL
: 5/6) by means of one (20) or two (5) leukaphereses; a median of 2.5 blood volumes was processed. Patients with
ANLL
mobilized more cells than patients with ALL; moreover, the shorter the interval between remission and mobilizing therapy, the higher was the yield. The products collected underwent purification, aiming at achieving complete removal of possibly contaminating leukemic cells, in 21 cases; also, unmanipulated aliquots were stored as rescues for all but one patient. All the 23 patients undergoing transplantation engrafted (ANC >0.5 x 10(9)/l) at a median of 12 days. In conclusion, the DIAVE regimen compares favorably with conventional mobilizing regimens, usually containing cyclophosphamide, in terms of low toxicity, collection time predictability, and efficacy, as shown by the high proportion of patients mobilizing, the large amounts of stem cell collected by means of one or two leukaphereses only, and the prompt engraftment after infusion.
...
PMID:Peripheral blood stem cell collection in children with acute leukemia: effectiveness of the 'DIAVE' mobilizing regimen. 1236 51
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