scholarly journals Total body irradiation and high-dose etoposide: a new preparatory regimen for bone marrow transplantation in patients with advanced hematologic malignancies [published erratum appears in Blood 1987 Jun;69(6):1789]

Blood ◽  
1987 ◽  
Vol 69 (4) ◽  
pp. 1015-1020 ◽  
Author(s):  
KG Blume ◽  
SJ Forman ◽  
MR O'Donnell ◽  
JH Doroshow ◽  
RA Krance ◽  
...  

In a phase I/II study, 47 patients (median age, 24 years) with hematologic malignancies (33 patients with acute leukemia not in first remission and 14 patients with other advanced malignant hematologic disorders) were treated with total body irradiation and high doses of etoposide (VP16–213) followed by bone marrow transplantation. At the time of analysis, 21 patients were alive, and 19 of them were in continued complete remission for 101 days to greater than 40 months (median, 12 months). The actuarial disease-free survival rate of the 33 acute leukemia patients is 43% (2 SEM, 18%) and the actuarial relapse rate is 32% (2 SEM, 20%). Five of the 14 patients with the other hematologic malignancies are alive, and four of them continue to be free of disease for 8 to 27 months. Pharmacokinetic studies established a strong correlation between the administered drug doses and their plasma levels and also demonstrated complete drug clearance prior to marrow grafting. An etoposide dose of 60 mg/kg body weight was found to be the maximum tolerated dose. This new preparatory regimen was well tolerated and was not associated with specific acute or long-term regimen-related toxicities. Our data suggest that total body irradiation with high-dose etoposide presents a viable alternative to other preparatory regimens. The role of this novel combination remains to be defined by future prospective randomized trials.

Blood ◽  
1987 ◽  
Vol 69 (4) ◽  
pp. 1015-1020 ◽  
Author(s):  
KG Blume ◽  
SJ Forman ◽  
MR O'Donnell ◽  
JH Doroshow ◽  
RA Krance ◽  
...  

Abstract In a phase I/II study, 47 patients (median age, 24 years) with hematologic malignancies (33 patients with acute leukemia not in first remission and 14 patients with other advanced malignant hematologic disorders) were treated with total body irradiation and high doses of etoposide (VP16–213) followed by bone marrow transplantation. At the time of analysis, 21 patients were alive, and 19 of them were in continued complete remission for 101 days to greater than 40 months (median, 12 months). The actuarial disease-free survival rate of the 33 acute leukemia patients is 43% (2 SEM, 18%) and the actuarial relapse rate is 32% (2 SEM, 20%). Five of the 14 patients with the other hematologic malignancies are alive, and four of them continue to be free of disease for 8 to 27 months. Pharmacokinetic studies established a strong correlation between the administered drug doses and their plasma levels and also demonstrated complete drug clearance prior to marrow grafting. An etoposide dose of 60 mg/kg body weight was found to be the maximum tolerated dose. This new preparatory regimen was well tolerated and was not associated with specific acute or long-term regimen-related toxicities. Our data suggest that total body irradiation with high-dose etoposide presents a viable alternative to other preparatory regimens. The role of this novel combination remains to be defined by future prospective randomized trials.


PEDIATRICS ◽  
1989 ◽  
Vol 83 (5) ◽  
pp. 753-757
Author(s):  
Thomas A. Kaleita ◽  
W. Donald Shields ◽  
Alan Tesler ◽  
Stephen A. Feig

Longitudinal neurodevelopmental studies of four consecutive young children treated by bone marrow transplantation for acute leukemia or aplastic anemia are presented. The children, the only four children less than 2 years of age who have received bone marrow transplants for these diseases at UCLA Medical Center, ranged in age from 36 weeks to 24 months at the time of transplantation. Conditioning involved high-dose cyclophosphamide treatment; three also had total body irradiation prior to bone marrow transplantation. Their respective outcomes after follow-up times of 28 months to 71 months posttransplantation are remarkable for normal somatic growth and normal development of intelligence, language, perception, and motor coordination. These findings indicate that future therapeutic studies of infants and young children with acute leukemia or aplastic anemia using total body irradiation, cyclophosphamide, and bone marrow transplantation are not contraindicated by risks of debilitating neurodevelopmental sequelae.


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