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  • 1
    Publication Date: 1993-07-15
    Description: Clonality studies of hematopoietic reconstitution after remission were performed in 24 female patients (pts) with leukemias characterized by specific molecular markers. At diagnosis, 13 pts had promyelocytic leukemia (PML) retinoic acid receptor-alpha (RAR-alpha)-rearranged acute promyelocytic leukemia (APL), 8 Philadelphia positive (Ph′+) break-point cluster region (BCR+) chronic myeloid leukemia (CML), and 3 Ph′+ (BCR+) acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL). All pts were analyzed at presentation and after Southern blot suppression of specific rearrangements after various treatments, including conventional chemotherapy, autologous or allogeneic bone marrow transplant (BMT), all-trans retinoic acid, and alpha-2b interferon. DNA from BM samples collected at diagnosis and, during remission phases, were subjected to Southern blot analysis with the M27 beta probe to detect X chromosome methylation differences, and with BCR, in CML and ALL cases, or PML/RAR- a probes for gene rearrangements, in APL cases. Twenty-one of the 24 pts had polyclonal methylation patterns at remission, together with disappearance of the specific rearrangement, whereas 3 pts retained the same single unmethylated DXS255 allele detected at diagnosis despite no evidence of gene rearrangement. Concerning these 3 pts, such an apparently clonal pattern was also observed in one case in T lymphocytes and skin-derived DNA; in a second case in BM fibroblasts and T lymphocytes; and, in the third case, in blood mononuclear cells obtained from her healthy female BM donor. All these 3 pts are in unmaintained clinical and cytogenetic remission after more than 20 months off therapy. These data suggest that (1) polyclonal and presumably normal hematopoiesis occurs in APL, CML, and Ph′+ ALL pts once the major burden of leukemic cells carrying a specific rearrangement is suppressed by treatment; and (2) unbalanced X chromosome methylation patterns, or aberrant methylation of X chromosome regions may be observed in some cases, most likely reflecting constitutional features simulating a clonal picture.
    Print ISSN: 0006-4971
    Electronic ISSN: 1528-0020
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 1993-11-15
    Description: We studied the clinical course of 130 chronic myeloid leukemia (CML) patients (89 males and 41 females) in the European Bone Marrow Transplantation Group (EBMT) registry who received transplants before January 1, 1988 and who subsequently had evidence of recurrent leukemia. All patients had received a pretransplant conditioning regimen including total body irradiation (TBI). The first evidence of relapse was cytogenetic only in 74 (57%) patients and hematologic in 56 (43%). The overall actuarial survival from relapse was 36% at 6 years, with a significantly higher proportion of survivors among female patients (53% v 30%; P 〈 .002). In univariate analysis, the 6-year probability of survival was 52% for patients with cytogenetic relapse and 30% for patients relapsing in chronic phase (CP), while no patient who relapsed in advanced phase (AP or BC) survived more than 3.5 years from relapse (P 〈 .0001). The actuarial survival of patients relapsing before 6 months, between 6 and 12 months, and later than 12 months after transplant was 27%, 26%, and 45%, respectively (P 〈 .002). Among patients with cytogenetic relapse, partial or complete disappearance of Ph-positive cells occurred in 40% of untreated patients and in 42% of those treated with interferon (IFN). However, IFN therapy significantly delayed progression toward hematologic disease. Cytogenetic responses were observed in 25% of patients who received IFN for relapse into CP, while only one minor cytogenetic response was reported in patients on conventional chemotherapy. For patients presenting with cytogenetic relapse as well as for those in hematologic relapse, IFN therapy significantly improved the 2-year probability of survival. However, long-term survival for IFN-treated patients in either group was not different from long-term survival in comparable patients not receiving IFN therapy. Twenty-nine patients of this series underwent a second bone marrow transplant (BMT) and the projected survival at 4 years after the second transplant is 28%. In multivariate Cox regression analysis, four factors remained significantly associated with survival: disease phase at relapse (P 〈 .0001), duration of time interval from BMT to relapse (P = .0001), interferon therapy at relapse (P = .0024), and patient sex (P = .0032). This retrospective study provides evidence that some patients who relapse after BMT may benefit from treatment with IFN; a second BMT may offer the chance of cure. Data from this analysis may be useful in designing future prospective trials on posttransplant CML relapse.
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 1995-01-01
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 1995-10-15
    Description: Hepatitis B virus (HBV)-infected individuals are occasionally used as donors for bone marrow transplantation (BMT). We studied the rate of HBV infection and the clinical expression of the associated liver disease in patients receiving marrow from HBsAg+ donors. We performed a retrospective survey in 14 BMT units in Italy in which all BMTs performed between 1984 and 1994 were reviewed and those involving HBsAg+ donors were identified. Donors and recipients were analyzed for HBV markers and liver disease. A total of 24 of 2,586 patients (0.9%) had received an HBsAg+ marrow. HBsAg became detectable in 22% of pre-BMT HBsAg-patients, but only 5.5% became chronic HBsAg carriers. Antigenemia developed more frequently in anti-HBs-compared with anti-HBs+ patients independently of passive prophylaxis with hyperimmune anti-HBs Ig, although the difference was not significant. Severe liver failure with death occurred in 21% of patients, which was a value greater than that generally observed after BMT in our units (3.7%). Patients with an anti-HBe+ donor had higher frequency of liver failure (28% v 0%) and alanine aminotransferase peaks as compared with those of patients with an HBeAg+ donor. Liver failure was not observed in anti-HBs+ recipients. The use of HBsAg+ donors, particularly if anti-HBe+, increases the risk of severe liver disease in BMT recipients. Anti-HBs positivity may prevent severe liver damage.
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  • 5
    Publication Date: 1995-09-01
    Description: The immune reactivity of allogeneic lymphocytes plays a major role in the control of leukemia after bone marrow transplantation. In patients with recurrent leukemia after marrow transplantation, chimerism and tolerance provide ideal conditions for adoptive immunotherapy with donor lymphocytes. We studied the effect of donor lymphocyte transfusions on acute and chronic leukemia in relapse after bone marrow transplantation. One hundred thirty-five patients with chronic myeloid leukemia (CML) (N = 84), acute myeloid leukemia (AML) (N = 23), acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) (N = 22), myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS) (N = 5), and polycythemia vera with osteomyelofibrosis (PCV) (N = 1) were treated with transfusions of donor lymphocytes. Patients were monitored for response of leukemia, including in CML, the use of the polymerase chain reaction for bcr/abl mRNA transcripts and for the occurrence of graft-versus-host disease (GVHD) and myelosuppression. Complete remissions were induced by donor lymphocyte transfusions in 54 patients with CML (73%) and in the patient with PCV; complete remissions were also induced in five patients (29%) with AML and a patient with MDS. In contrast, ALL did not respond to adoptive immunotherapy with donor lymphocyte transfusions. Remissions were durable in patients treated for CML in chronic phase (probability of remission: 87% at 3 years). Lymphocyte transfusions were also given to 18 patients with ALL, AML, MDS, and transformed phase CML who were in remission after chemotherapy. These remissions were not durable. Fifty- two patients (41%) developed GVHD of grade 2 or more, and 41 patients (34%) showed signs of myelosuppression. Seventeen patients died without leukemia, 14 patients with GVHD and/or myelosuppression. Donor lymphocyte transfusions exert strong effects against myeloid forms of leukemia and induce durable remissions in CML.
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  • 6
    Publication Date: 1995-03-01
    Description: Patients with severe aplastic anemia (SAA) and a neutrophil (PMN) count of less than 0.5 x 10(9)/L are exposed to a high risk of early mortality when treated with antilymphocyte globulin (ALG) and steroids, with the major problem being infectious complications. The addition of human recombinant granulocyte colony-stimulating factor (rhG-CSF) to ALG may reduce early mortality by improving neutrophil counts in the short term. To test the feasibility of this approach, the SAA Working Party of the European Group for Blood and Marrow Transplantation (EBMT) designed a pilot study that included rhG-CSF (5 micrograms/kg/d, days 1 through 90), horse ALG (HALG; 15 mg/kg/d, days 1 through 5), methylprednisolone (2 mg/kg/d, days 1 through 5, then tapering the dose), and cyclosporin A (CyA; 5 mg/kg/d orally, days 1 through 180). Patients with newly diagnosed acquired SAA (untreated) and with neutrophil counts of 〈 or = 0.5 x 10(9)/L were eligible. Forty consecutive patients entered this study and are evaluable with a minimum follow up of 120 days: the median age was 16 years (range, 2 to 72 years), the interval from diagnosis to treatment was 24 days, and the median PMN count was 0.19 x 10(9)/L. Twenty-one patients had hemorrhages, and 19 were infected at the time of treatment. Overall, treatment was well tolerated: the median maximum PMN count during rhG- CSF administration was 12 x 10(9)/L (range, 0.4 x 10(9)/L to 44 x 10(9)/L). There were three early deaths (8%) due to infection. Four patients (10%) showed no recovery, whereas 33 patients (82%) had trilineage hematologic reconstitution and became transfusion- independent at a median interval of 115 days from treatment. Median follow up for surviving patients is 428 days (range, 122 to 1,005). Actuarial survival is 92%: 86% and 100% for patients with PMN counts less than 0.2 x 10(9)/L or between 0.2 x 10(9)/L and 0.5 x 10(9)/L, respectively. This study suggests that the addition of rhG-CSF to ALG and CyA is well tolerated, is associated with a low risk of mortality, and offers a good chance of hematologic response. This protocol would appear to be an interesting alternative treatment for SAA patients with a low PMN count who lack an HLA-identical sibling.
    Print ISSN: 0006-4971
    Electronic ISSN: 1528-0020
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  • 7
    Publication Date: 1993-11-15
    Description: We studied the clinical course of 130 chronic myeloid leukemia (CML) patients (89 males and 41 females) in the European Bone Marrow Transplantation Group (EBMT) registry who received transplants before January 1, 1988 and who subsequently had evidence of recurrent leukemia. All patients had received a pretransplant conditioning regimen including total body irradiation (TBI). The first evidence of relapse was cytogenetic only in 74 (57%) patients and hematologic in 56 (43%). The overall actuarial survival from relapse was 36% at 6 years, with a significantly higher proportion of survivors among female patients (53% v 30%; P 〈 .002). In univariate analysis, the 6-year probability of survival was 52% for patients with cytogenetic relapse and 30% for patients relapsing in chronic phase (CP), while no patient who relapsed in advanced phase (AP or BC) survived more than 3.5 years from relapse (P 〈 .0001). The actuarial survival of patients relapsing before 6 months, between 6 and 12 months, and later than 12 months after transplant was 27%, 26%, and 45%, respectively (P 〈 .002). Among patients with cytogenetic relapse, partial or complete disappearance of Ph-positive cells occurred in 40% of untreated patients and in 42% of those treated with interferon (IFN). However, IFN therapy significantly delayed progression toward hematologic disease. Cytogenetic responses were observed in 25% of patients who received IFN for relapse into CP, while only one minor cytogenetic response was reported in patients on conventional chemotherapy. For patients presenting with cytogenetic relapse as well as for those in hematologic relapse, IFN therapy significantly improved the 2-year probability of survival. However, long-term survival for IFN-treated patients in either group was not different from long-term survival in comparable patients not receiving IFN therapy. Twenty-nine patients of this series underwent a second bone marrow transplant (BMT) and the projected survival at 4 years after the second transplant is 28%. In multivariate Cox regression analysis, four factors remained significantly associated with survival: disease phase at relapse (P 〈 .0001), duration of time interval from BMT to relapse (P = .0001), interferon therapy at relapse (P = .0024), and patient sex (P = .0032). This retrospective study provides evidence that some patients who relapse after BMT may benefit from treatment with IFN; a second BMT may offer the chance of cure. Data from this analysis may be useful in designing future prospective trials on posttransplant CML relapse.
    Print ISSN: 0006-4971
    Electronic ISSN: 1528-0020
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
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  • 8
    Publication Date: 1993-07-15
    Description: Clonality studies of hematopoietic reconstitution after remission were performed in 24 female patients (pts) with leukemias characterized by specific molecular markers. At diagnosis, 13 pts had promyelocytic leukemia (PML) retinoic acid receptor-alpha (RAR-alpha)-rearranged acute promyelocytic leukemia (APL), 8 Philadelphia positive (Ph′+) break-point cluster region (BCR+) chronic myeloid leukemia (CML), and 3 Ph′+ (BCR+) acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL). All pts were analyzed at presentation and after Southern blot suppression of specific rearrangements after various treatments, including conventional chemotherapy, autologous or allogeneic bone marrow transplant (BMT), all-trans retinoic acid, and alpha-2b interferon. DNA from BM samples collected at diagnosis and, during remission phases, were subjected to Southern blot analysis with the M27 beta probe to detect X chromosome methylation differences, and with BCR, in CML and ALL cases, or PML/RAR- a probes for gene rearrangements, in APL cases. Twenty-one of the 24 pts had polyclonal methylation patterns at remission, together with disappearance of the specific rearrangement, whereas 3 pts retained the same single unmethylated DXS255 allele detected at diagnosis despite no evidence of gene rearrangement. Concerning these 3 pts, such an apparently clonal pattern was also observed in one case in T lymphocytes and skin-derived DNA; in a second case in BM fibroblasts and T lymphocytes; and, in the third case, in blood mononuclear cells obtained from her healthy female BM donor. All these 3 pts are in unmaintained clinical and cytogenetic remission after more than 20 months off therapy. These data suggest that (1) polyclonal and presumably normal hematopoiesis occurs in APL, CML, and Ph′+ ALL pts once the major burden of leukemic cells carrying a specific rearrangement is suppressed by treatment; and (2) unbalanced X chromosome methylation patterns, or aberrant methylation of X chromosome regions may be observed in some cases, most likely reflecting constitutional features simulating a clonal picture.
    Print ISSN: 0006-4971
    Electronic ISSN: 1528-0020
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  • 9
    Publication Date: 1995-10-15
    Description: Hepatitis B virus (HBV)-infected individuals are occasionally used as donors for bone marrow transplantation (BMT). We studied the rate of HBV infection and the clinical expression of the associated liver disease in patients receiving marrow from HBsAg+ donors. We performed a retrospective survey in 14 BMT units in Italy in which all BMTs performed between 1984 and 1994 were reviewed and those involving HBsAg+ donors were identified. Donors and recipients were analyzed for HBV markers and liver disease. A total of 24 of 2,586 patients (0.9%) had received an HBsAg+ marrow. HBsAg became detectable in 22% of pre-BMT HBsAg-patients, but only 5.5% became chronic HBsAg carriers. Antigenemia developed more frequently in anti-HBs-compared with anti-HBs+ patients independently of passive prophylaxis with hyperimmune anti-HBs Ig, although the difference was not significant. Severe liver failure with death occurred in 21% of patients, which was a value greater than that generally observed after BMT in our units (3.7%). Patients with an anti-HBe+ donor had higher frequency of liver failure (28% v 0%) and alanine aminotransferase peaks as compared with those of patients with an HBeAg+ donor. Liver failure was not observed in anti-HBs+ recipients. The use of HBsAg+ donors, particularly if anti-HBe+, increases the risk of severe liver disease in BMT recipients. Anti-HBs positivity may prevent severe liver damage.
    Print ISSN: 0006-4971
    Electronic ISSN: 1528-0020
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  • 10
    Publication Date: 2000-03-15
    Description: One hundred consecutive patients with severe aplastic anemia (SAA) received horse antilymphocyte globulin (ALG), cyclosporin A (CyA), 6-methylprednisolone (6Mpred), and granulocyte colony-stimulating factor (G-CSF) as first-line therapy. The median age was 16 years (range, 1-72 years) and median neutrophil count was 0.2 × 109/L (range, 0-0.5 × 109/L). Trilineage hematologic recovery (at a median interval of 96 days from treatment) was seen in 77 patients (48 complete, 29 partial) after 1 (n = 50) or more courses of ALG (n = 27). Of the 23 nonresponders, 11 patients died at a median interval of 83 days (range, 16-1132 days), 6 were considered treatment failures and underwent transplantation, and 6 were pancytopenic. Cytogenetic abnormalities were seen in 11% of patients, clonal hematologic disease in 8%, and relapse of marrow aplasia in 9%. The actuarial survival at 5 years was 87% (median follow-up 1424 days): 76% versus 98% for patients with neutrophil counts less than versus greater than 0.2 × 109/L (P = .001) and 88% versus 87% for patients aged less than versus more than 16 years (P = .8). The actuarial probability of discontinuing CyA was 38%. Patients who did not achieve a white blood cell (WBC) count of 5 × 109/L during G-CSF treatment have a low probability of responding (37%) and a high mortality rate (42%). This update confirms a high probability for SAA patients of becoming transfusion independent and of surviving after treatment with ALG, CyA, 6Mpred, and G-CSF, with a significant effect of neutrophil counts on outcome. Problems still remain, such as absent or incomplete responses, clonal evolution, relapse of the original disease, and cyclosporine dependence. Early transplantation, also from alternative donors, may be warranted in patients with poor WBC response to G-CSF.
    Print ISSN: 0006-4971
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