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Query: UMLS:C0039730 (
thalassemia
)
10,305
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Marrow transplantation is effective treatment for a number of haematological diseases in patients under the age of 50 who have an HLA-identical sibling donor. It is generally successful when used early in the treatment of
aplastic anaemia
. It is the only treatment that offers long-term disease-free survival for patients with acute leukaemia who have relapsed at least once, with 10-30 per cent apparent cures. Although still somewhat controversial, it appears also to be the treatment of choice for patients with acute non-lymphoblastic leukaemia in first chemotherapy induced remission and for those with chronic myelogenous leukaemia in the chronic phase since approximately 50-60 per cent of these patients are surviving after marrow transplantation in complete remission, apparently cured. Marrow grafting is the only effective treatment for many patients with inherited immunological-deficiency diseases and certain genetic storage diseases. It is being explored for the therapy of patients with lymphoma, Hodgkin's disease, multiple myeloma, small-cell lung cancer, testicular cancer, ovarian cancer and genetic disorders of haematopoiesis. Cures of congenital Fanconi anaemia, Blackfan-Diamond anaemia, osteopetrosis, and paroxysmal nocturnal haemoglobinuria have been achieved by marrow grafting. Genetic disorders associated with haemolytic anaemia and cyclic neutropenia have been cured by marrow grafting in animals. Target disorders for marrow transplantation in humans are
thalassaemia
major and sickle cell disease, and, indeed, a first successful transplant for treatment of
thalassaemia
major has recently been described (Thomas et al, 1982). Marrow transplantation has been limited by the fact that many patients do not have HLA-identical siblings and very few have monozygotic twins. The Seattle team has now explored the use of less well-matched family member donors in more than 80 patients with leukaemia. These donors share one HLA haplotype genetically with the patient and are phenotypically identical at two of the three major HLA loci on the other HLA haplotype (Clift et al, 1979). Overall, the post-transplant survival appears more a reflection of the type and stage of the leukaemia than of the marrow donor. Patients with leukaemia grafted in relapse have a projected survival of 20-30 per cent and those transplanted in remission of 50 per cent. The incidence and severity of GVHD may not be significantly different from that of patients given HLA-identical sibling marrow grafts.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Application of bone marrow transplantation in leukaemia and aplastic anaemia. 635 79
Marrow grafting, once undertaken only after failure of all other forms of therapy, is now the preferred therapy for some malignant diseases. Chemoradiotherapy and marrow grafting for patients with acute leukemia who have failed chemotherapy results in cure rates of 10%-30%. For patients under the age of 50 with acute nonlymphoblastic leukemia transplanted in first remission, the cure rate is approximately 50% with better results in younger patients. Marrow grafting is now being explored in a variety of types of malignant diseases having in common a steep dose-response curve to therapy, therapy limited by marrow toxicity, and the availability of a suitable marrow donor. Current research in the field of marrow transplantation is reviewed and provides a basis for a reasonable expectation that results of marrow transplantation will continue to improve. The use of partially matched family members or phenotypically histocompatibility leukocyte antigen-identical unrelated donors will make marrow grafting available to a larger fraction of patients. Marrow grafting, developed for the treatment of malignant disease, has found an important application to nonmalignant diseases, including immunodeficiency syndromes,
aplastic anemia
, and
thalassemia
and other genetic disorders of hematopoiesis.
...
PMID:Karnofsky Memorial Lecture. Marrow transplantation for malignant diseases. 636 43
Bone marrow transplantation in childhood is an established treatment modality for
aplastic anemia
, the acute and chronic leukemias, and severe combined immune deficiency. Recently, experience with this treatment has also been favorable with small numbers of children who have Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome, several types of inherited storage diseases, Fanconi's anemia,
thalassemia
, infantile malignant osteopetrosis, and selected cases of lymphoma and other solid tumors. The psychosocial impact and financial costs of bone marrow transplantation can be substantial. Multi-institutional, prospective, randomized trials that would compare transplantation and conventional therapy are necessary to establish the indications and precise timing for this procedure. Further development of monoclonal antibodies, a better understanding of the histocompatibility antigen systems, and improvement in pretransplantation conditioning regimens should increase the spectrum of effectiveness for bone marrow transplantation in the coming years.
...
PMID:Bone marrow transplantation for diseases of childhood. 636 12
Our experience at the Ramathibodi Hospital with 20 infants and children who had Aeromonas septicemia is reviewed. Their ages were from 1 day to 14 years. Eighteen patients had underlying diseases: leukemia, 5;
aplastic anemia
, 4; cirrhosis, 2;
thalassemia
/hemoglobinopathy, 3; renal failure, 1; ileal perforation, 1; marasmus, 1; and cavernous hemangioma with thrombocytopenia, 1. Blood cultures yielded Aeromonas hydrophila in all patients, and four patients had polymicrobial bacteremia. Fifteen episodes of septicemia were community-acquired and five were hospital-acquired. The clinical manifestations of these patients were similar to septicemia due to other Gram-negative enteric bacilli. Two patients each had ecthyma gangrenosum, necrotizing fasciitis and meningitis. Antibiotic treatment included penicillins, cephalosporins, aminoglycosides and sulfamethoxazole-trimethoprim. The overall case fatality rate was 50%; eight of the nine patients with acute leukemia or
aplastic anemia
died. With the exception of one child the blood cultures were sterile in all patients before death. Aeromonas septicemia is an uncommon but severe infection which occurs predominantly in compromised hosts.
...
PMID:Aeromonas septicemia in infants and children. 672 2
Recently there have been increasing reports of HIV infection acquired through transfusion of HIV seronegative blood in Thailand due to high incidence of HIV new infection in blood donors. Blood or blood components (BC) prepared from HIV seronegative blood donation pose significant hazards to recipients because of the risk of viremia during the "window period" of HIV infection. This paper presents the HIV seroprevalence in hematologic patients other than hemophiliacs who received multiple blood transfusion at Ramathibodi Hospital. The retrospective analysis was done on 167 patients: 132
thalassemia
, 19 leukemia, 5
aplastic anemia
, 5 ITP, 2 pure red cell aplasia, 2 congenital non spherocytic hemolytic anemia, 1 hereditary spherocytosis and 1 autoimmune hemolytic anemia patients, who received blood transfusion during January 1, 1987 till February 29, 1992 at the Department of Pediatrics, Ramathibodi Hospital. The number of blood or BC transfused in each patient was 1-154 units with the average of 23 units per patient per 5 years with a total 4,000 units. All were HIV sero-negative. Anti-HIV screening was performed periodically in these patients about 1-2 times per year or as necessary. The results were HIV seronegative in all cases. The reason for negative results cannot be explained clearly. It should be noted that our thalassemic patients receive leukocyte poor blood and avoid a hypertransfusion program. Patients with other blood diseases received both whole blood and BC. The HIV contaminated blood in the window period was estimated to be 1:10,000 in Thailand which showed HIV antigen positive but antibody negative. These patients may be fortunately received HIV non contaminated blood.
...
PMID:HIV seroprevalence in hematologic patients other than hemophiliacs at Ramathibodi Hospital. 788 70
Bone marrow transplantation (BMT) is one of the most effective procedures to cure the previously uncured hematologic diseases. However, it is costly and HLA typing to select the compatible donors contributed to its cost. A total of 53 prospective patients for BMT and their 114 siblings were analyzed to evaluate the use of locally prepared HLA-ABC common typing tray (ABCCT) during Mar 1988-Mar 1992. The 16, 9, 7, 5, 5 and 12 patients were diagnosed as
aplastic anemia
, CML,
thalassemia
, ALL, ANLL and other blood diseases, respectively. It was found that 18 patients were HLA-identical (HLA-ID) with one of their siblings except one patient had 2 HLA-ID sibs. All of those who appeared to be HLA-ID were further tested for the HLA-ABCDR typings. It was observed that 16 (88.89%) of 18 patients and 17 (89.47%) of 19 sibs were confirmed as HLA-ID. After careful clinical screening, only 13 HLA-ID pairs were able to proceed to the mixed lymphocyte culture and confirmed their status of HLA-ID by this test. Finally, only 6 (46.15%) of 13 patients received BMT with a high rate of success, ie all patients have survived with bone marrow engraftment. Thus, ABCCT is very useful for related BMT. It was highly efficient to exclude HLA-non-ID and haplo-ID yet the cost and workload were greatly reduced.
...
PMID:The value of HLA-ABC common typing tray in relation to bone marrow transplantation. 788 91
In Taiwan, a country with 21 million people, 388 bone marrow transplants (BMTs), 308 allografts and 80 autografts, were performed in 5 BMT centers from November 1983 to October 1993. The commonest indications were leukemia,
aplastic anemia
, lymphoma and
thalassemia
. Campaigns promoting an unrelated marrow donor registry were started in August 1993 and recruited approximately 26,000 volunteers. A peripheral stem cell program is just beginning. The overall results of BMT in Taiwan are comparable to other countries. The complications of BMT are similar to Western series, except that acute GVHD was rarer in one large series; this observation needs further study. A particular indication for allogeneic BMT in Taiwan is
thalassemia
, accounting for 10% of all patients. Disease-free survival after BMT for
thalassemia
is 44%; graft rejection is the major cause of treatment failure. Another important issue is the role of hepatitis B virus (HBV) in BMT, since the prevalence of HBV infection in Taiwan is very high (> 90%). Abnormal liver function is currently the most common complication and might be related to HBV. Among nearly 100 allogeneic BMTs with HBV carriers as either donor or recipient, 2 patients (approximately 2%) died of HBV-related hepatic failure. Whether the HBV status of the donor and recipient is an important prognostic factor remains to be defined.
...
PMID:Bone marrow transplantation in Taiwan: an overview. 792 Feb 98
Seventy-three BMT procedures (42 allogeneic-BMT, 30 autologous-BMT, 1 syngeneic transplant) were undertaken at the Shariati Hospital in Tehran between March 1991 and November 1993. Allogeneic-BMT was performed for
thalassaemia
major (n = 23), AML in complete remission (n = 3), severe
aplastic anaemia
(n = 7), CML (n = 7), dyskeratosis congenita (n = 2) and Fanconi anaemia (n = 1). Conditioning regimens comprised busulphan (BU) plus cyclophosphamide (CY) or CY only. Thirty-two (78%) of the 43 patients remain alive 1-34 months after BMT. Twelve patients died: the causes of death were haemorrhagic cystitis (n = 1), CMV pneumonitis (n = 1), GVHD (n = 3), infection (n = 3), rejection (n = 1), VOD (n = 2) and hepatitis (n = 1). Autologous-BMT was performed for patients with AML in CR (n = 16), ALL in CR (n = 9), lymphoma in relapse (n = 3), Ewing sarcoma (n = 1) and multiple myeloma (n = 1). The median age was 18 years. Conditioning regimens were Ara C plus CY, etoposide plus CY and high-dose melphalan. Sixteen (54%) of the 30 patients survive, 14 in continuous complete remission. The causes of death were relapse (AML (n = 7), ALL (n = 4), lymphoma (n = 1)), VOD (n = 1) and infection (n = 1).
...
PMID:Bone marrow transplantation in Iran. 792 Mar 8
In the year 1992, 203 teams in 26 countries in Europe performed a total of 6065 bone marrow transplantations (BMT). Transplant source in 2666 cases (44%) was an allogeneic donor, in 2171 cases an HLA-identical sibling donor, in 170 a non-identical family donor, in 29 a twin donor and in 296 cases an unrelated volunteer donor. There were 3399 autologous transplants (56%): 2494 autologous BMT, 644 autologous peripheral blood stem cell transplants and 261 combined autologous BM and peripheral blood stem cell transplants. Indications for transplant were leukemias in 2963 patients (49%; 1987 allogeneic, 976 autologous), lymphoproliferative disorders in 1890 patients (31%; 201 allogeneic, 1689 autologous), solid tumors in 739 patients (12%; 10 allogeneic, 739 autologous),
aplastic anemia
in 194 patients (3%; 193 allogeneic, 1 autologous),
thalassemia
in 128 patients (2%; allogeneic), inborn errors in 115 patients (2%; allogeneic) and miscellaneous disorders in 36 patients (32 allogeneic, 4 autologous). Compared with an EBMT survey 2 years ago, there was an increase in the number of participating institutions and in the number of transplants performed from all sources. If the 142 teams reporting in 1990 and 1992 are compared alone, there is an increase in unrelated allogeneic BMT and in autologous BMT. There was an increase in autologous transplants for myeloma and lymphoma. These data confirm a continuing trend to apply BMT as a therapeutic modality.
...
PMID:Bone marrow transplantation activity in Europe 1992: report from the European Group for Bone Marrow Transplantation (EBMT). 801 52
Today, bone marrow transplantation (BMT) is an established therapy. This statement is best verified by the number of BMTs performed. Between January 1990 and December 1992, 172 European teams in 26 countries carried out a total of 14,334 transplants. There were 6642 allogeneic transplants: 5513 BMT from an HLA-identical sibling donor, 370 from a non-identical family member, 88 from an identical twin donor and 671 from an unrelated volunteer donor. There were 7692 autologous transplants: 6577 autologous bone marrow, 777 peripheral-blood stem-cell and 338 combined bone-marrow and peripheral-blood stem-cell transplants. Indications were: leukaemias in 52% (7479), lymphoproliferative disorders in 29% (4125), solid tumours in 11% (1540),
aplastic anaemia
and
thalassaemia
in 3% (487) and inborn errors an miscellaneous disorders in the remaining 5% (703). The results of these transplants are not yet known. From previous analyses it can be expected that more than 50% of patients will be alive and well 10 years after BMT. The main factors influencing outcome are known; they depend on type, sub-type, stage of disease at time of transplant, the time from diagnosis to transplant and the conditioning regimen for all transplants. For allogeneic BMT, donor source, donor and recipient age, sex, donor/recipient sex combination, donor and recipient viral status, graft-versus-host disease prevention method and region are additional factors. Knowledge of these factors enables us today to estimate the potential risk and adjust the therapy for an individual patient.
...
PMID:Bone marrow transplantation today. 815 55
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