29 research outputs found

    Allogeneic hematopoietic cell transplantation from unrelated donors in multiple myeloma: study from the italian bone marrow donor registry.

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    AbstractTo evaluate trends in allografting from unrelated donors, we conducted a study on 196 consecutive myeloma patients transplanted between 2000 and 2009 in Italy. Twenty-eight percent, 37%, and 35%, respectively, received myeloablative, reduced-intensity, and nonmyeloablative conditioning. In these 3 cohorts, 1-year and 5-year transplantation-related mortalities were 28.8% and 37.0%, 20.3% and 31.3%, and 25.0% and 30.3%, respectively (P = .745). Median overall survival (OS) and event-free survival from transplantation for the 3 cohorts were 29 and 10 months, 11 and 6 months, and 32 and 13 months, respectively (P = .039 and P = .049). Overall cumulative incidences of acute and chronic graft-versus-host-disease (GVHD) were 46.1% and 51.1%. By Cox multivariate analyses, chronic GVHD was significantly associated with longer OS (hazard ratio [HR], .51; P = .009), whereas the use of peripheral blood stem cells was borderline significant (HR, .55; P = .051). Better response posttransplantation was associated with longer event-free survival (HR, 2.13 to 4.25; P < .001). Acute GVHD was associated with poorer OS (HR, 2.53; P = .001). This analysis showed a strong association of acute and chronic GVHD and depth of response posttransplantation with clinical outcomes. Long-term disease control remains challenging regardless of the conditioning. In the light of these results, prospective trials may be designed to better define the role of allografting from unrelated donors in myeloma

    Getting ‘Smad' about obesity and diabetes

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    Recent findings on the role of transforming growth factor (TGF)-β/Smad3 signaling in the pathogenesis of obesity and type 2 diabetes have underscored its importance in metabolism and adiposity. Indeed, elevated TGF-β has been previously reported in human adipose tissue during morbid obesity and diabetic neuropathy. In this review, we discuss the pleiotropic effects of TGF-β/Smad3 signaling on metabolism and energy homeostasis, all of which has an important part in the etiology and progression of obesity-linked diabetes; these include adipocyte differentiation, white to brown fat phenotypic transition, glucose and lipid metabolism, pancreatic function, insulin signaling, adipocytokine secretion, inflammation and reactive oxygen species production. We summarize the recent in vivo findings on the role of TGF-β/Smad3 signaling in metabolism based on the studies using Smad3−/− mice. Based on the presence of a dual regulatory effect of Smad3 on peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor (PPAR)β/δ and PPARγ2 promoters, we propose a unifying mechanism by which this signaling pathway contributes to obesity and its associated diabetes. We also discuss how the inhibition of this signaling pathway has been implicated in the amelioration of many facets of metabolic syndromes, thereby offering novel therapeutic avenues for these metabolic conditions

    Inter-method differences and commutability of control materials for HbA2 measurement

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    The intermethod variability of control materials and patient blood samples for the measurement of hemoglobin A2 (HbA2) were compared. A set of 54 blood samples and 10 control materials were analyzed in duplicate by HPLC and microcolumn methods. For each set of methods the distances of the materials from the regression line of patient blood results (expressed as normalized residuals) were calculated. Four out of ten controls had normalized residuals exceeding three standard deviations from the regression line. Moreover, total Hb and Hb derivatives analysis proved that only a minority of the controls could be considered similar to patients' blood samples. Intermethod calibration performed "a posteriori" by the two best performing control materials improved intermethod variability among all the five tested methods. We conclude that the use of high resolution HPLC methods together with appropriate commutable control materials allows for better harmonization of results in the field of diagnosis of hemoglobin disorders in research and clinical practice

    Allogeneic transplantation of unmanipulated peripheral blood stem cells in patients with multiple myeloma

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    In multiple myeloma (MM), allogeneic bone marrow transplantation may produce complete and durable responses, but is accompanied by significant transplant-related mortality (TRM). To assess feasibility and possible advantages offered by the use of allogeneic, growth factor-primed PBSC instead of marrow, we analyzed the data of 10 patients with MM (IgG = 6, IgA = 1, BJ = 2, non-secreting = 1; stage II = 1, stage III = 8, plasma-cell leukemia = 1) who received an allogeneic transplant with PBSC. Their age ranged between 35 and 53 years (median 45). All were HLA-identical to their sibling donors. Prior to allograft, six patients received standard-dose chemotherapy (DAV or CY-Dexa) and four a sequential intensified scheme with autologous PBSC support. At the time of transplantation, three patients were in CR, three in PR, three had refractory disease, one progressive disease. Patients were conditioned with busulfan-melphalan (n = 9) or busulfan-cyclophosphamide (n = 1), and were allografted with unmanipulated PBSC obtained by apheresis after treatment with G-CSF alone (n = 6) or GM-CSF followed by G-CSF (n = 4). All patients engrafted, with 0.5 x 10(9)/l PMN and 50 x 10(9)/l platelets on (median) day 13. Four patients had > or =grade II acute GVHD (grade II in 3, grade III in 1). Following allograft, CR was achieved in 71% patients. Eight are currently alive, with six in CR at a median of 18.5 months (range 7-28) from the transplant. Two patients died, 1 and 4 months from the allograft, respectively, and one is alive with progression. A PCR analysis of IgH rearrangement showed that residual disease was no more molecularly detectable in four out of seven evaluated patients following allograft. The results suggest that PBSC may improve the therapeutic efficacy of allogeneic transplant in MM, not only by a reduction of TRM but also by an improvement of rate and quality of response

    High rate of remission and low rate of disease recurrence in patients with multiple myeloma allografted with PBSC from their HLA-identical sibling donors

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    A total of 30 multiple myeloma patients (M=23, F=7; age 31-55 years, median 48) were allografted with peripheral blood stem cells (PBSC) from HLA-identical siblings. Time to transplantation was 3-107 months (median 8). Prior chemotherapy lines varied from 1 to 6 (median 1). Four patients were in complete remission (CR), 11 in partial remission (PR), 13 were considered to be nonresponders, and two had progressive disease. Most were conditioned with busulfan-melphalan. PBSC were collected by apheresis after G-CSF or sequential GM-CSF and G-CSF. The patients were grafted with 4.4-24.1 x 10(6)/kg CD34+ (median 7.9) and 0.9-7.9 x 10(8)/kg CD3+ cells (median 2.3). GVHD prophylaxis was methotrexate-cyclosporine. Engraftment was complete and rapid. Grades II-IV acute GVHD (aGVHD) developed in 16 (53%), but was grade III-IV only in five (17%); chronic GVHD (cGVHD) developed in 17 out of the 24 evaluable patients (71%). A total of 18 patients (71%) attained CR after transplantation. TRM was 30% overall, 16% at 100 days. There was only one relapse. Overall survival and event-free survival at 73 months were 60% and 67%, respectively. PCR negativity for IgH-gene rearrangement occurred in all persistently CR patients studied. PBSC allograft can induce long remissions, because of profound suppression of the neoplastic clone that is probably linked to the antitumor effect of cGVHD

    Allogeneic transplantation following a reduced-intensity conditioning regimen in relapsed/refractory peripheral T-cell lymphomas: long-term remissions and response to donor lymphocyte infusions support the role of a graft-versus-lymphoma effect.

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    Rescue chemotherapy or autologous stem cell transplantation (autoSCT) gives disappointing results in relapsed peripheral T-cell lymphomas (PTCLs). We have retrospectively evaluated the long-term outcome of 52 patients receiving allogeneic SCT for relapsed disease. Histologies were PTCL-not-otherwise specified (n=23), anaplastic large-cell lymphoma (n=11), angioimmunoblastic T-cell lymphomas (n=9) and rare subtypes (n=9). Patients were allografted from related siblings (n=33, 64%) or alternative donors (n=13 (25%) from unrelated and 6 (11%) from haploidentical family donors), following reduced-intensity conditioning (RIC) regimens including thiotepa, fludarabine and cyclophosphamide. Most of the patients had chemosensitive disease (n=39, 75%) and 27 (52%) failed a previous autoSCT. At a median follow-up of 67 months, 27 of 52 patients were found to be alive (52%) and 25 (48%) were dead (n=19 disease progression, n=6 non-relapse mortality (NRM)). The cumulative incidence (CI) of NRM was 12% at 5 years. Extensive chronic graft-versus-host disease increased the risk of NRM (33% versus 8%, P=0.04). The CI of relapse was 49% at 5 years, influenced by disease status at the time of allografting (P=0.0009) and treatment lines (P=0.007). Five-year overall survival and progression-free survival (PFS) were 50% (95% CI, 36 - 63%) and 40% (95% CI, 27 - 53%), respectively. The current PFS was 44% (95% CI, 30-57%). In all, 8 out of 12 patients (66%) who received donor-lymphocytes infusions for disease progression had a response. At multivariable analysis, refractory disease and age over 45 years were independent adverse prognostic factors. RIC allogeneic SCT is an effective salvage treatment with a better outcome for younger patients with chemosensitive disease
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