Pharmacology of High-Dose Therapy with Bone Marrow Transplantation

Author(s):  
R.B. Jones ◽  
P. Cagnoni ◽  
S.I. Bearman ◽  
E.J. Shpall
1988 ◽  
Vol 6 (9) ◽  
pp. 1411-1416 ◽  
Author(s):  
A M Carella ◽  
A M Congiu ◽  
E Gaozza ◽  
P Mazza ◽  
P Ricci ◽  
...  

Fifty patients with recurrent Hodgkin's disease have been treated with high-dose therapy followed by autologous bone marrow transplantation. Forty-one patients had extranodal sites of relapse and 31 patients had constitutional symptoms. Two patients had been treated with mechlorethamine, vincristine, procarbazine, and prednisone (MOPP), lomustine, vinblastine, procarbazine, and prednisone (CcVPP), and radiation; 16 patients with MOPP, doxorubicin, bleomycin, vinblastine, and dacarbazine (ABVD), radiation, and lomustine, etoposide, and prednisone (CEP); 20 patients with alternating MOPP/ABVD, and 12 patients with alternating MOPP/ABVD followed by CEP and radiation. Eighteen patients had progressive disease during alternating MOPP/ABVD protocol alone or during conventional salvage therapy; 32 patients had had a complete remission with first-line therapy but later relapsed, 25 of them having received conventional salvage therapy; 12 achieved no response or progression ("resistant-relapse" patients); and 13 responded partially or completely ("sensitive-relapse" patients). Complete remission occurred in 24 patients (48%) with a median duration of 24 months and 16 patients (32%) achieved partial response with a median duration of 9 months, for an overall response rate of 80%. Ten patients failed to respond and died in progressive disease 1 to 10 months (median, 6 months) after transplantation. Toxicity was significant including infections (20%), liver enzymes and alkaline phosphatase elevations (100%), and carmustine lung toxicity (7%). There were two treatment-related deaths; one patient died of Pseudomonas aeruginosa septicemia and another patient died of cerebral hemorrhage. These results validate the procedure of high-dose therapy followed by autologous bone marrow transplantation in inducing remission in these advanced, highly-treated patients. Clearly, the question of whether high-dose therapy and transplantation will eventually supersede new conventional salvage therapies will be addressed after controlled clinical studies.


1996 ◽  
Vol 73 (6) ◽  
pp. 273-277 ◽  
Author(s):  
H. C. Schouten ◽  
J. J. M. Raemaekers ◽  
J. C. Kluin-Nelemans ◽  
H. van Kamp ◽  
W. A. M. Mellink ◽  
...  

Blood ◽  
1995 ◽  
Vol 85 (11) ◽  
pp. 3320-3327 ◽  
Author(s):  
J Domenech ◽  
C Linassier ◽  
E Gihana ◽  
A Dayan ◽  
D Truglio ◽  
...  

Hematopoietic reconstitution has been studied in 180 patients after autologous bone marrow transplantation based on peripheral blood cell (PBC) recovery time and marrow progenitor counts sequentially tested for up to 4 years. Several factors that could influence hematopoietic reconstitution have been analyzed including sex, age, diagnosis, disease status, conditioning regimen, graft progenitor content, graft in vitro purging, and postgrafting administration of growth factors. Before transplantation, marrow progenitor values were normal only for colony-forming unit granulocyte macrophage (CFU-GM) in contrast to colony-forming unit-erythroid (CFU-E), burst-forming unit-erythroid (BFU-E), and colony-forming unit-megakaryocyte (CFU-Meg). After transplantation, as described with allogenic grafts, these values remained low for several years, although PBC counts were nearly normalized within a few weeks. Pregraft values were reached after 2 years for CFU-GM and BFU-E, and after 4 years for CFU-E, while CFU-Meg failed to reach pregraft values after this time. Normal levels were reached after 4 years only by CFU-GM. On univariate and multivariate analysis, the following factors appeared to delay both PBC and marrow progenitor reconstitution: underlying disease (particularly acute myeloid leukemias), graft characteristics such as low stem cell content and in vitro purging, conditioning regimens with total body irradiation or busulfan, and lack of postgraft administration of growth factors. In conclusion, high-dose therapy followed by bone marrow transplantation induces a deep and prolonged impairment of hematopoiesis irrespective of any alloimmune reaction or postgraft immunosuppressive therapy.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)


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