543: The Impact of High-Risk Criteria on Mortality Following Heart Transplantation in Children: A Multi-Institutional Study

2008 ◽  
Vol 27 (2) ◽  
pp. S255-S256 ◽  
Author(s):  
R.R. Davies ◽  
J.M. Chen ◽  
D.C. Naftel ◽  
G. Boyle ◽  
S. Zangwill ◽  
...  
Blood ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 134 (Supplement_1) ◽  
pp. 293-293
Author(s):  
Mareike Rasche ◽  
Emma Steidel ◽  
Denise Kondryn ◽  
Nils Von Neuhoff ◽  
Lucie Sramkova ◽  
...  

BACKGROUND: A risk-adapted approach incorporating genetic data, complemented by response evaluation may help to identify patients with high-risk disease (HR) who could benefit from hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT) at initial disease. Several international study groups currently recommend HSCT in pediatric HR AML. However, the impact of a risk-adapted treatment strategy is unknown. Here, we present results of our first treatment period with a risk-adapted indication for HSCT in the AML-BFM study group. PATIENTS AND METHOD: From 2012 until 2017 a total of 324 children <18 years of the AML-BFM registry 2012 (hereafter named R12; Germany, Austria and Czech Republic) with de novo AML were included. Down syndrome or secondary leukemia, FAB M3, an accompanying disease or pre-treatment >14 days were excluded. Patients or guardians provided written informed consent. Treatment guidelines were recommended but were not obligatory: Chemotherapy followed the best arm of study AML-BFM 2004, but patients were stratified according to new genetic and response-adapted (≥10% leukemic blasts after induction 1 or ≥5% after induction 2) risk criteria with the indication of HSCT in HR patients. We used AML-BFM 2004 (hereafter called S04) as historical comparison. The analysis was performed following the Declaration of Helsinki. Five-year estimates of overall survival (pOS) and event-free survival (pEFS) were calculated using SPSS (version 25). EFS is defined as the time from diagnosis to the first event (relapse, death, failure to achieve remission or secondary malignancy) or until last follow-up. Data were frozen on May 1st, 2019. RESULTS: We sought to systematically decipher the impact of a risk-adapted approach in pediatric AML. The total cohort showed a pEFS of 58±5% and pOS of 78±3% (vs S04 52±2%, p=0.014 and 70±2%, p=0.059) and significantly increased rates of HSCT (S04 vs R12: p<0.001). Importantly, the SR group did not change between periods. The increase in survival was rather explained by improvements in patients with genetically defined HR AML resulting in a survival similar to IR AML (pEFS IR vs HR: p=0.684; pOS: p=0.861). Next, we compared outcome of a previously well-defined subgroup with rare very high-risk criteria (VHR). The risk-adapted therapy resulted in a significantly higher pEFS (S04 vs R12: 33±5% vs 48±11; p=0.017) and higher rates of HSCT (37% vs 78%, p<0.001). Nevertheless, salvage treatment was equally efficient in both periods, resulting in a pOS of 56±6% vs 72±7% (p=0.202). To evaluate the effects of inclusion of response to mere genotype-driven stratification we reanalyzed all R12 patients retrospectively according to their genetic risk only (see table 1). Response-guided re-stratification led to major shifts of patients to higher risk groups. Importantly, despite the fact that the registry made only recommendations according to the new risk stratification, compliance with guidelines including HSCT indication was very high (n=319; 98%). Discrepancies were as follows: SR have been treated with a higher intensity (i.e. more chemotherapy and/or HSCT; n=2); HR AML treated as IR (n=2), IR AML received HR treatment including HSCT (n=2). Seventy-five percent of HR AML have been transplanted. Discrepancies are explainable by early relapses or death before HSCT. To validate the response-guided re-stratification more specifically, we performed a subgroup analysis of HR AML: The survival was similar in re-stratified IR patients and genetic HR patients with poor response (p=0.656) but was higher in genetic HR patients with good response (p=0.01), indicating an effective selection of re-stratified patients with IR. CONCLUSION: This analysis indicates the benefit of risk-adapted indications for HSCT in pediatric AML: After a long period with a stable pEFS (Rasche et al. Leukemia 2018) the current cohort now demonstrates a significant improvement. The efficacy of the risk-adapted approach is reflected by remarkable survival rates for patients with HR AML. At the same time, it seems not to impair the ongoing improvement of salvage therapy. However, for patients with poorly responding IR AML the outcome is dismal despite HSCT and they require alternative treatment approaches. Further studies are also needed to detect genetically defined HR patients who may not need HSCT, but also to develop efficient re-stratification approaches to enhance the survival in SR patients. Table 1. Disclosures Reinhardt: Novartis: Other: Participation in Advisory Boards; Roche: Research Funding; CSL Behring: Research Funding; Jazz: Other: Participation in Advisory Boards, Research Funding.


2013 ◽  
Vol 57 (5) ◽  
pp. 1318-1324 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marc L. Schermerhorn ◽  
Margriet Fokkema ◽  
Philip Goodney ◽  
Ellen D. Dillavou ◽  
Jeffrey Jim ◽  
...  

2007 ◽  
Vol 5 (2) ◽  
pp. 77-97 ◽  
Author(s):  
Julian Chow ◽  
Grace Yoo ◽  
Catherine Vu

The passage of the Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity Act (PRWORA) of 1996 has major implications for low-income Asian American and Pacific Islander (AAPI) populations. The purpose of this paper is to provide an overview of the research currently examining the impact of welfare reform on AAPI recipients and the welfare-to-work services available to this population. This article highlights AAPI participation and their timing-out rates in California’s CalWORKs program and their barriers to transitioning to work. Four welfare-to-work program models and recommendations are presented to illustrate strategies that can be used to address the unique needs of AAPI in order to alleviate their high risk for timing-out: one-stop-shops, transitional jobs programs, providing comprehensive and family focused services, and additional research and evaluation of programs specific to assisting the AAPI population on CalWORKs.


2002 ◽  
Vol 14 (1) ◽  
pp. 157-177 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jennifer M. Mueller ◽  
John C. Anderson

An auditor generating potential explanations for an unusual variance in analytical review may utilize a decision aid, which provides many explanations. However, circumstances of budgetary constraints and limited cognitive load deter an auditor from using a lengthy list of explanations in an information search. A two-way between-subjects design was created to investigate the effects of two complementary approaches to trimming down the lengthy list on the number of remaining explanations carried forward into an information search. These two approaches, which represent the same goal (reducing the list) but framed differently, are found to result in a significantly different number of remaining explanations, in both low- and high-risk audit environments. The results of the study suggest that the extent to which an auditor narrows the lengthy list of explanations is important to the implementation of decision aids in analytical review.


2021 ◽  
Vol 7 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Maitri Kalra ◽  
Yan Tong ◽  
David R. Jones ◽  
Tom Walsh ◽  
Michael A. Danso ◽  
...  

AbstractPatients with triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC) who have residual disease after neoadjuvant therapy have a high risk of recurrence. We tested the impact of DNA-damaging chemotherapy alone or with PARP inhibition in this high-risk population. Patients with TNBC or deleterious BRCA mutation (TNBC/BRCAmut) who had >2 cm of invasive disease in the breast or persistent lymph node (LN) involvement after neoadjuvant therapy were assigned 1:1 to cisplatin alone or with rucaparib. Germline mutations were identified with BROCA analysis. The primary endpoint was 2-year disease-free survival (DFS) with 80% power to detect an HR 0.5. From Feb 2010 to May 2013, 128 patients were enrolled. Median tumor size at surgery was 1.9 cm (0–11.5 cm) with 1 (0–38) involved LN; median Residual Cancer Burden (RCB) score was 2.6. Six patients had known deleterious BRCA1 or BRCA2 mutations at study entry, but BROCA identified deleterious mutations in 22% of patients with available samples. Toxicity was similar in both arms. Despite frequent dose reductions (21% of patients) and delays (43.8% of patients), 73% of patients completed planned cisplatin. Rucaparib exposure was limited with median concentration 275 (82–4694) ng/mL post-infusion on day 3. The addition of rucaparib to cisplatin did not increase 2-year DFS (54.2% cisplatin vs. 64.1% cisplatin + rucaparib; P = 0.29). In the high-risk post preoperative TNBC/BRCAmut setting, the addition of low-dose rucaparib did not improve 2-year DFS or increase the toxicity of cisplatin. Genetic testing was underutilized in this high-risk population.


Author(s):  
Elmo Christian Saarentaus ◽  
Aki Samuli Havulinna ◽  
Nina Mars ◽  
Ari Ahola-Olli ◽  
Tuomo Tapio Johannes Kiiskinen ◽  
...  

AbstractCopy number variants (CNVs) are associated with syndromic and severe neurological and psychiatric disorders (SNPDs), such as intellectual disability, epilepsy, schizophrenia, and bipolar disorder. Although considered high-impact, CNVs are also observed in the general population. This presents a diagnostic challenge in evaluating their clinical significance. To estimate the phenotypic differences between CNV carriers and non-carriers regarding general health and well-being, we compared the impact of SNPD-associated CNVs on health, cognition, and socioeconomic phenotypes to the impact of three genome-wide polygenic risk score (PRS) in two Finnish cohorts (FINRISK, n = 23,053 and NFBC1966, n = 4895). The focus was on CNV carriers and PRS extremes who do not have an SNPD diagnosis. We identified high-risk CNVs (DECIPHER CNVs, risk gene deletions, or large [>1 Mb] CNVs) in 744 study participants (2.66%), 36 (4.8%) of whom had a diagnosed SNPD. In the remaining 708 unaffected carriers, we observed lower educational attainment (EA; OR = 0.77 [95% CI 0.66–0.89]) and lower household income (OR = 0.77 [0.66–0.89]). Income-associated CNVs also lowered household income (OR = 0.50 [0.38–0.66]), and CNVs with medical consequences lowered subjective health (OR = 0.48 [0.32–0.72]). The impact of PRSs was broader. At the lowest extreme of PRS for EA, we observed lower EA (OR = 0.31 [0.26–0.37]), lower-income (OR = 0.66 [0.57–0.77]), lower subjective health (OR = 0.72 [0.61–0.83]), and increased mortality (Cox’s HR = 1.55 [1.21–1.98]). PRS for intelligence had a similar impact, whereas PRS for schizophrenia did not affect these traits. We conclude that the majority of working-age individuals carrying high-risk CNVs without SNPD diagnosis have a modest impact on morbidity and mortality, as well as the limited impact on income and educational attainment, compared to individuals at the extreme end of common genetic variation. Our findings highlight that the contribution of traditional high-risk variants such as CNVs should be analyzed in a broader genetic context, rather than evaluated in isolation.


2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Minjae Yoon ◽  
Jaewon Oh ◽  
Kyeong-Hyeon Chun ◽  
Chan Joo Lee ◽  
Seok-Min Kang

AbstractImmunosuppressive therapy can decrease rejection episodes and increase the risk of severe and fatal infections in heart transplantation (HT) recipients. Immunosuppressive therapy can also decrease the absolute lymphocyte count (ALC), but the relationship between early post-transplant ALC and early cytomegalovirus (CMV) infection is largely unknown, especially in HT. We retrospectively analyzed 58 HT recipients who tested positive for CMV IgG antibody and received basiliximab induction therapy. We collected preoperative and 2-month postoperative data on ALC and CMV load. The CMV load > 1200 IU/mL was used as the cutoff value to define early CMV infection. Post-transplant lymphopenia was defined as an ALC of < 500 cells/μL at postoperative day (POD) #7. On POD #7, 29 (50.0%) patients had post-transplant lymphopenia and 29 (50.0%) patients did not. The incidence of CMV infection within 1 or 2 months of HT was higher in the post-transplant lymphopenia group than in the non-lymphopenia group (82.8% vs. 48.3%, P = 0.013; 89.7% vs. 65.5%, P = 0.028, respectively). ALC < 500 cells/μL on POD #7 was an independent risk factor for early CMV infection within 1 month of HT (odds ratio, 4.14; 95% confidence interval, 1.16–14.77; P = 0.029). A low ALC after HT was associated with a high risk of early CMV infection. Post-transplant ALC monitoring is simple and inexpensive and can help identify patients at high risk of early CMV infection.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document