Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0026986 (myelodysplastic syndrome)
14,926 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A retrospective analysis was performed to investigate the outcome of high-dose therapy (HDT) and autologous hematopoietic cell transplantation in patients with follicular lymphomas beyond first remission. Ninety-two patients with primary induction failure or relapsed follicular low-grade lymphoma (FLGL), follicular large cell lymphoma (FLCL), and transformed follicular lymphoma (TFL) were treated with myeloablative therapy consisting of etoposide (60 mg/kg), cyclophosphamide (100 mg/kg), and either carmustine (BCNU;15 mg/kg) or fractionated total body irradiation (FTBI; 1200 cGy) followed by transplantation of purged autologous bone marrow or peripheral blood hematopoietic cells. For the 49 patients with relapsed FLGL, the median age was 49 years and the median interval from diagnosis to HDT was 30 months. The 4-year estimate of overall survival (OS) was 60% (95% confidence interval [CI], 45%-75%) and of disease-free survival (DFS) was 44% (95% CI, 29%-59%). Treatment with the FTBI-containing HDT regimen was associated with significantly longer DFS (P = .04) and OS (P = .04) in our multivariate analysis. OS was also significantly longer among those treated with 3 or fewer chemotherapy regimens. For the 26 FLCL patients, the median age was 51 years and in 31% the indication for HDT was primary induction failure. For FLCL patients, the 4-year estimate of OS was 58% (95% CI, 37%-79%) and of DFS was 51% (95% CI, 30%-72%). Among the 17 patients with TFL, 13 (76%) transformed at first relapse, and only 6 patients (35%) achieved complete remission with salvage therapy prior to HDT. For TFL patients, the 4-year estimate of OS was 50% (95% CI, 24%-76%) and of DFS 49% (95% CI, 20%-78%). There were 3 occurrences of myelodysplasia (1 after treatment with TBI, 2 after BCNU treatment), yielding an estimated incidence of 7% (95% CI, 0%-16%) at 56 months. This analysis shows that relapsed FLGL patients treated with 3 or fewer different chemotherapy regimens show inferior survival. The HDT regimen containing FTBI appears to be superior to the BCNU-based regimen for relapsed FLGL, although longer follow-up is needed to evaluate late effects. Lastly, patients with TFL or induction failure and relapsed FLCL can achieve survival outcome comparable to those observed with the indolent follicular lymphomas.
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PMID:High-dose therapy and autologous hematopoietic-cell transplantation for follicular lymphoma beyond first remission: the Stanford University experience. 1140 Sep 52

Hematopoietic colony-stimulating factors have been introduced into clinical practice as additional supportive measures to reduce infectious complications associated with congenital or acquired neutropenia. Over the past decade, we have begun to appreciate the subtler aspects of the proper use of G-CSF and GM-CSF, identifying appropriate indications and contraindications. In the course of evaluating the corpus of studies, a set of formal recommendations have been propagated for the judicious use of these expensive growth factors. To prevent serious infection, the use of G-CSF or GM-CSF is recommended in a subset of pediatric cancer patients shortly after having received chemotherapy or a form of a marrow transplant. Children with highly intensive chemotherapy (e.g., children with high risk ALL or NHL) seem to benefit from hematopoietic growth factors whereas this is still unclear for children undergoing therapy for solid tumors. An exciting development is the use of G-CSF and GM-CSF to mobilize peripheral-blood progenitor cells for autologous or allogeneic transplantation. In pediatric patients with hematological diseases, there are only few data on the use of hematopoietic growth factors in children with myelodysplastic syndrome. Experts recommend the early administration of G-CSF in children with very severe aplastic anemia. The use of G-CSF is also recommended in children with severe chronic neutropenia, but these patients have to be monitored regularly for cytogenetic abnormalities. No larger study has shown a clinical benefit of hematopoietic growth factor in preterm or term infants. Future studies in pediatric patients are clearly warranted to address several issues. Prospective clinical trials are still needed to define specific treatment groups who can benefit from growth factor support. In this regard, efforts must be directed at better defining the endpoints and in particular assigning value to reduction in treatment of possible infectious complications, such as days in hospital, antibiotic usage and costs. In addition, randomized studies are required to evaluate the proper dosage and duration of therapy, which most likely will vary between groups of patients. In addition, combinations of different growth factors have to be tested, particularly if ex vivo expansion and the storage of hematopoietic stem cells are to be utilized in a wider spectrum of patients.
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PMID:[Hematopoietic growth factors in prophylaxis and therapy of infections complications in children with neutropenia]. 1152 56

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.
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PMID:Long-term follow-up of persisting mixed chimerism after partially T cell-depleted allogeneic stem cell transplantation. 1184 Feb 58

The concept of utilizing enhanced immunosuppression rather than myeloablative cytotoxic conditioning has allowed the engraftment of allogeneic stem cells from related and unrelated donors with lower early transplant-related mortality (TRM) and morbidity. This approach shifts tumor eradication to the graft-vs-host immune response directed against minor histocompatibility antigens expressed on tumor cells. This is not without risk, as the long-term effects of graft-versus-host disease (GVHD), it's treatment, or resulting complications and immunodeficiency may be life threatening. However, this approach does allow the application of a potentially curative procedure to elderly or medically infirm patients who would not tolerate high-dose conditioning regimens. Section I, by Dr. Sandmaier, describes the current use of nonmyeloablative regimens and matched related or unrelated donors for the treatment of patients with CLL, CML, acute leukemia, MDS, lymphoma, and myeloma. In Section II, Dr. Maloney discusses the use of cytoreductive autologous followed by planned non-myeloablative allografts as treatment for patients with myeloma or NHL. This tandem transplant approach has a lower TRM than conventional high dose allografting. The nonmyeloablative allograft may allow the graft-versus-tumor (GVT) immune response to eradicate the minimal residual disease that causes nearly all patients with low-grade NHL or myeloma to relapse following autologous transplantation. In Section III, Dr. Mackinnon discusses the risks and benefits of T cell depletion strategies to prevent acute GVHD, while retaining GVT activity by planned donor lymphocyte infusions. Finally, in Section IV, Dr. Shizuru discusses the relationship between GVHD and GVT activity. Future studies, employing a greater understanding of these issues and the separation of GVHD from GVT activity by immunization or T cell cloning, may allow nonmyeloablative allogeneic transplantation to be safer and more effective.
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PMID:Non-myeloablative transplantation. 1244 34

Age >or=50 years has been reported to be an adverse risk factor for allogeneic BMT, and consequently many of these patients are either not transplanted or treated on nonmyeloablative protocols. To study if older patients perform poorly relative to younger adults following myeloablative allogeneic transplants, we compared the outcomes of consecutive adults aged >or=50 years (n=51) to those <50 years (n=262) who received BU, CY+/-etoposide and allogeneic transplantation for AML, CML, MDS and NHL from 1984 to 2000. Median ages were 53 (range 50-66) and 35 (range 18-49) years for older and younger patients, respectively. Patients were low-risk if they had AML in CR1, CML in first chronic phase, refractory anemia, or NHL in remission or sensitive relapse at the time of transplantation. All others were high-risk. In patients with low-risk disease, there was no significant difference in overall survival (OS) between older and younger adults (P=0.64), while older patients tended to have a shorter OS among high-risk patients (P=0.06). The 3-year OS was 53% (95% CI, 29-77%) compared to 60% (95% CI, 50-69%) for older and younger patients with low-risk disease, respectively. The corresponding 3-year OS were 27% (95% CI, 11-43%) and 37% (95% CI, 25-45%) for high-risk patients. In low-risk patients, the incidence of acute and chronic graft-versus-host disease, and treatment-related mortality were similar in older and younger patients, while older patients experienced more treatment-related deaths by day 100. On multivariable analysis, age >or=50 years was a significant adverse factor only when high-risk patients were considered. We conclude that when radiation-free conditioning is used, age >or=50 years is not a significant adverse risk factor for allogeneic BMT in patients with low-risk disease, and that such patients should not be excluded from conventional myeloablative approaches until the efficacy of nonmyeloablative transplantation is better established.
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PMID:Radiation-free regimens result in similar outcomes of allogeneic hematopoietic progenitor cell transplantation in patients aged >or=50 years compared to younger adults with low-risk disease. 1262 88

Hematopoietic stem cell transplants (HSCTs) are considered the best treatment option for many hematological malignancies, and transplant numbers have increased five-fold during the last decade. Only a few controlled prospective studies are available, and different opinions prevail. Data from 118 167 HSCT (36% allogeneic, 64% autologous) collected within the EBMT activity survey from 1990 to 2001 were used to assess trends over time, transplant rates and coefficient of variation (CV) of transplant rates among European countries for acute myeloid leukemia (AML; 18.5%), acute lymphocytic leukemia (ALL; 12%), chronic myeloid leukemia (CML; 11.5%), myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS; 3%), lymphoproliferative disorders (LPS; 36.3%) and multiple myeloma (MM; 18.7%). Transplant rates increased in all countries and for all indications from 1990 to 2001 from 1.7-fold (CML) to 24.8-fold (MM). Transplant rates have declined for CML since 1999. Autologous HSCT are the preferred choice for LPS and MM, allogeneic HSCT for ALL and myeloid malignancies. CVs of less than 50% suggest consensus for allogeneic HSCT in AML, ALL, CML, MDS and NHL, for autologous HSCT in LPS and MM. These data give an overview of the current status of HSCT for hematological malignancies in Europe and provide objective information for health-care providers and patient counselling.
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PMID:Hematopoietic stem cell transplantation for hematological malignancies in Europe. 1275 Jul 9

The role of high dose therapy, including autologous stem cell transplantation (ASCT) in indolent non-Hodgkin's lymphomas remains controversial. We evaluated a dose intense regimen of CHOP induction followed by high dose cyclophosphamide consolidation (CHOP-HC) versus CHOP alone in a prospective comparison to assess intensified therapy without ASCT. Twenty-five patients with previously untreated advanced stage indolent NHL were enrolled: follicular lymphoma, grade 1 (11 patients) and grade 2 (8 patients); small lymphocytic lymphoma (5 patients); and lymphoplasmacytic lymphoma (1 patient). All patients were treated as clinically indicated. The median age was 47 years (21-70). There were 15 males, and 10 females. Three patients had intra-abdominal stage II, 2 patients with stage III, and 20 patients with stage IV disease. All patients received induction with CHOP for 4 cycles (weeks 1, 4, 7, 10): cyclophosphamide 750 mg/m2 i.v., doxorubicin 50 mg/m2 i.v., vincristine 1.4 mg/m2 i.v. (2 mg capped dose) and prednisone 100 mg p.o. x 5 days. Following induction, responding patients were given consolidation with either high dose cyclophosphamide @ 3 gm/m2 i.v. for 3 doses with G-CSF (weeks 13, 15, 17) or 2 additional cycles of CHOP (weeks 13, 16), stratified by stage and bulk of disease. The overall response rate to CHOP was 92% (3 CR, 8 PR) and to CHOP-HC was 93% (4 CR, 8 PR). The overall response, complete response and partial response rates were comparable in both arms. Median progression free survival for CHOP was 15.9 and 23.0 months for CHOP-HC. At 74.3 months median follow-up, all patients in the CHOP arm have recurred; 3 patients in the CHOP-HC arm (3 CR) have not recurred. The median overall survival has not been reached (at 5 years, 77% OS for CHOP-HC versus 83% OS for CHOP alone]. Greater hematologic toxicity was observed with CHOP-HC resulting in an increased number of hospitalizations for sepsis. There were no treatment-related deaths. No myelodysplasia or acute leukemia has been seen to date. With no obvious improvement in CR and with greater hematologic toxicity than CHOP, CHOP-HC is not recommended for treatment of indolent non-Hodgkin's lymphomas.
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PMID:CHOP with high dose cyclophosphamide consolidation versus CHOP alone as initial therapy for advanced stage, indolent non-Hodgkin's lymphomas. 1285 95

Anemia is a frequent symptom encountered in hematological malignancies at diagnosis or in the course of the disease. Allogeneic transfusions were, until recently, the only treatment available and used only for severe anemia. Erythropoietin is currently an important alternative especially for treatment and even to prevent severe anemia. It has been assessed for the treatment of chemotherapy related anemia in NHL, myeloma and CLL with a significant reduction of blood transfusions and prevention of grade 3-4 anemia in 51% of patients. In myelodysplasia, the more effective regimen is the association of G-CSF and Epo. In the setting of allogeneic bone marrow transplantation, it reduces the time to red cell engraftment and probably the number of blood cell unit per patient in contrast with autologous stem cell transplant. All these studies assessed the efficacy of Epo in hematological malignancies but needs further trials including the assessment of the quality of life and economical parameters.
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PMID:[Anemia and chemotherapy of malignant hemopathies]. 1285 26

Secondary myelodysplastic syndrome (sMDS) and acute myelogenous leukemia (AML) have been recognized with increasing frequency following autologous stem cell transplantation (ASCT). A retrospective analysis of 230 consecutive patients with Hodgkin's lymphoma (HL, 64) and non-Hodgkin's lymphoma (NHL, 166) who underwent ASCT was conducted to assess the incidence and risk factors for the development of sMDS/AML. At a median follow up of 41 months (range 0.1-177 months), 10 of 230 patients (4.3%) developed sMDS/AML. The 5-year-actuarial incidence of sMDS/AML was 13.1% and 5-year cumulative incidence by competing risk analysis was 4.2%. The median time to development of sMDS/AML was 39.9 months from the time of ASCT (range 12.1-62.0 months). Complex karyotypes at diagnosis of sMDS/AML included structural anomalies and/or loss of chromosome 5 (eight patients), 7 (five patients), 17 (two patients) and 20 (two patients). All patients subsequently died, at a median of 6.8 months (range 0-39.9) from diagnosis of sMDS/AML. Fluorescent in situ hybridization (FISH) analysis for -5/5q- and -7/7q- were normal in all six patients whose pre-ASCT bone marrow was available for testing. Five of the six had samples available for testing at diagnosis of sMDS/AML and all had abnormal FISH results. By univariate statistical analysis, male gender (P=0.01), prior alkylating agents (mechlorethamine for HL, P=0.001 and cyclophosphamide for NHL, P=0.05) and the number of prior treatment regimens (P=0.04) were significantly associated with the development of sMDS/AML. Given the relatively low incidence rate of sMDS/AML, these analyses are primarily exploratory in nature but provide some insight into relevant risk factors and illustrate the risk of developing sMDS/AML after myeloablative conditioning and ASCT for lymphoma.
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PMID:Secondary myelodysplastic syndrome and acute myelogenous leukemia are significant complications following autologous stem cell transplantation for lymphoma. 1285 5

We assessed the prognostic importance of the platelet count 100 days post transplant of 107 consecutive patients receiving ablative allogeneic bone marrow transplant (BMT) between 7/96 and 12/00 who survived at least 100 days. Diagnoses included AML (n=36), chronic myelogenous leukemia (n=27), NHL (n=14), ALL (n=16), MDS (n=9), aplastic anemia (n=3), and one Hodgkin's disease and myelofibrosis each. In total, 64% were in remission or in chronic phase or had aplastic anemia (good risk), and 36% had active disease at the time of transplant (bad risk). In all, 70% were matched sibling transplants and 30% were matched unrelated donor transplants. The mean follow-up for the patients remaining alive is 48 months. Survival was powerfully influenced by the 100-day platelet count: 4-year survival was 19% for patients with a platelet count <30 x 10(9)/l; 41% for patients with a platelet count of 30-50; and 72% for those with a platelet count >50 (P<0.001; log-rank test). In a multivariable analysis, the most powerful risk factors for mortality after allogeneic BMT were low 100-day platelet count (P<0.001) and bad risk disease (P=0.009). We conclude that the platelet count 100 days post transplant is a powerful predictor of overall survival.
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PMID:Prognostic importance of the platelet count 100 days post allogeneic bone marrow transplant. 1468 14


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