17 research outputs found

    High-dose chemotherapy with autologous bone marrow transplantation in 50 advanced resistant Hodgkin's disease patients: An Italian Study Group report

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    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

    Progetto "Archeologia Urbana a Senigallia" I: le ricerche di via Cavallotti

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    Il contributo d\ue0 conto dei primi scavi archeologici a Senigallia dopo molto tempo: le ricerche in via Cavallotti, infatti, condotte da un'equipe del Dipartimento di Archeologia, hanno condotto alla scoperta di una fase preromana databile al V-IV sec. a.C., molto prima dunque dell'arrivo tradizionale dei Roamni agli inizi del III sec. a.C

    Progetto "Archeologia Urbana a Senigallia" I: le ricerche di via Cavallotti

    No full text
    Il contributo dà conto dei primi scavi archeologici a Senigallia dopo molto tempo: le ricerche in via Cavallotti, infatti, condotte da un'equipe del Dipartimento di Archeologia, hanno condotto alla scoperta di una fase preromana databile al V-IV sec. a.C., molto prima dunque dell'arrivo tradizionale dei Roamni agli inizi del III sec. a.C

    COVID-19 elicits an impaired antibody response against SARS-CoV-2 in patients with haematological malignancies

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    COVID-19 is associated with high mortality in patients with haematological malignancies (HM) and rate of seroconversion is unknown. The ITA-HEMA-COV project (NCT04352556) investigated patterns of seroconversion for SARS-CoV-2 IgG in patients with HMs. A total of 237 patients, SARS-CoV-2 PCR-positive with at least one SARS-CoV-2 IgG test performed during their care, entered the analysis. Among these, 62 (26·2%) had myeloid, 121 (51·1%) lymphoid and 54 (22·8%) plasma cell neoplasms. Overall, 69% of patients (164 of 237) had detectable IgG SARS-CoV-2 serum antibodies. Serologically negative patients (31%, 73 of 237) were evenly distributed across patients with myeloid, lymphoid and plasma cell neoplasms. In the multivariable logistic regression, chemoimmunotherapy [odds ratio (OR), 3·42; 95% confidence interval (CI), 1·04-11·21; P = 0·04] was associated with a lower rate of seroconversion. This effect did not decline after 180 days from treatment withdrawal (OR, 0·35; 95% CI: 0·11-1·13; P = 0·08). This study demonstrates a low rate of seroconversion in HM patients and indicates that treatment-mediated immune dysfunction is the main driver. As a consequence, we expect a low rate of seroconversion after vaccination and thus we suggest testing the efficacy of seroconversion in HM patients
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