747 research outputs found
GEMTUZUMAB OZOGAMICIN COMBINED WITH INDUCTION CHEMOTHERAPY IN YOUNG ADULTS WITH ACUTE MYELOID LEUKEMIA: REVIEW AND PERSPECTIVES.
Progress in treatment of acute myeloid leukemia (AML) is slow. Many new
agents have been tested, but few were approved. Gemtuzumab Ozogamicin (GO) is a new AML-targeted drug that is composed by a monoclonal antibody targeting a surface antigen of myeloid leukemic cells (CD33) combined with a potent cytotoxic (calicheamicin). We review here the studies of GO in AML,
including an update of the Italian studies, and we trace back the story of a drug that was developed 15 years ago and, regrettably, is no longer available for
the treatment of AML, with the exception of Japan. GO was approved by the US FDA for the second-line treatment of AML in the elderly, and was shown by
several European large prospective and randomized studies to be active also in first line, both alone, but particularly in combination with standard chemotherapy.
Regrettably, a registration study that was performed in US could not confirm the superiority of GO and chemotherapy on chemotherapy alone, and the drug
was withdrawn. The differences among the US and the European studies are discussed. The profile of the AML patients who are expected to benefit more by the reintroduction of GO is proposed: first-line, less than 60 years old, CD33 expressed in more than 20% leukemic cells, low/intermediate cytogenetic risk, and low expression of the PGP multidrug resistance protein
Fusobacterium nucleatum: a rare cause of bacteremia in neutropenic patients with leukemia and lymphoma
Although anaerobic bacteremias are uncommon in oncohematologic patients, nevertheless they have been considered an emergent problem in the last few years. Fusobacterium nucleatum is an anaerobic Gram-negative bacillus commonly present in the oral cavity and in the respiratory and genito-urinary tracts. Over a 10-year period 18 episodes of F. nucleatum bacteremia in patients with hematological malignances (15 leukemias and 3 lymphomas) have been observed in our Department of Hematology. Predisposing factors included oropharyngeal mucositis and severe neutropenia owing to intensive chemotherapy. In our experience no septic shock occurred and the outcome of bacteremias caused by F. nucleatum was favorable
The Role of Meningioma-1 (Mn1) Gene as Marker for Prognosis and Minimal Residual Disease Monitoring in Acute Myeloid Leukemia: A Concise Review
Molecular markers are necessary for prognostic stratification and monitoring of Minimal
Residual Disease (MRD) in Acute Myeloid Leukemia (AML) [1,2]. Cytogenetic aberrations have
long been recognized as the most important prognostic variable in AML, and are still the major
determinant for post-remission therapy [3]. Unfortunately, only 50-60% of AML patients present
an abnormal karyotype at diagnosis, while the remaining cases display a Normal Karyotype (NK).
NK AML patients are generally included in an “intermediate risk” prognostic group, that is however
characterized by a heterogeneous clinical course. To stratify prognosis of NK AML patients,
numerous studies have led, in the last decade, to the introduction of different molecular markers
such as FLT3, NPM1, BAALC and CEBPA [4-7]. Still, their use to monitor disease, either defining
remission status and detecting relapse as early as possible, is still somehow controversial, due to
fluctuations during disease course, low incidence rates in AML and sensitivity of the technologies
detecting the single marker [8-10]. These limitations have, to date, precluded a timely and precise
quantification of disease in NK AML patients, thus preventing from a complete individualization
of post-remission therapy and early treatment in case of impending relapse. In other words, in
NK AML it has not been reached the precision achieved in BCR/ABL-positive chronic myeloid
leukemia and PML/RAR alpha mutated acute promyelocytic leukemia
Population pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamic target attainment of isavuconazole against aspergillus fumigatus and aspergillus flavus in adult patients with invasive fungal diseases: Should therapeutic drug monitoring for isavuconazole be considered as mandatory as for the other mold-active azoles?
Isavuconazole is a newer broad-spectrum triazole approved for the treatment of invasive fungal disease. The objective of this study was to conduct a population pharmacokinetic and pharma-codynamic analysis of isavuconazole in a retrospective cohort of hospitalized patients. A nonlinear mixed-effect approach with Monte Carlo simulations was conducted to assess the probability of target attainment (PTA) of an area under the concentration–time curve (AUC24 h )/minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC) ratio of 33.4 (defined as efficacy threshold against A. fumigatus and A. flavus) associated with a maintenance dose (MD) of 100, 200 and 300 mg daily after loading. The cumulative fraction of response (CFR) against the EUCAST MIC distributions of A. fumigatus and A. flavus was calculated as well. The proportion of trough concentrations (Ctrough ) exceeding a defined threshold of toxicity (>5.13 mg/L) was estimated. A total of 50 patients, with a median age of 61.5 years, pro-vided 199 plasma isavuconazole concentrations. Invasive pulmonary aspergillosis was the prevalent type of infection and accounted for 80% (40/50) of cases. No clinical covariates were retained by the model. With the standard MD of 200 mg daily, CFRs were always ≥90% during the first two months of treatment. The risk of Ctrough < 1.0 mg/L was around 1%, and that of Ctrough > 5.13 mg/L was 27.7 and 39.2% at 28 and 60 days, respectively, due to isavuconazole accumulation over time. Our findings suggest that TDM for isavuconazole should not be considered as mandatory as for the other mold-active azoles voriconazole and posaconazole
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