Hematopoietic Cell Transplantation After Nonmyeloablative Conditioning for Advanced Chronic Lymphocytic Leukemia
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Published:2005-06-01
Issue:16
Volume:23
Page:3819-3829
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ISSN:0732-183X
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Container-title:Journal of Clinical Oncology
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language:en
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Short-container-title:JCO
Author:
Sorror Mohamed L.1, Maris Michael B.1, Sandmaier Brenda M.1, Storer Barry E.1, Stuart Monic J.1, Hegenbart Ute1, Agura Edward1, Chauncey Thomas R.1, Leis Jose1, Pulsipher Michael1, McSweeney Peter1, Radich Jerald P.1, Bredeson Christopher1, Bruno Benedetto1, Langston Amelia1, Loken Michael R.1, Al-Ali Haifa1, Blume Karl G.1, Storb Rainer1, Maloney David G.1
Affiliation:
1. From the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center; University of Washington; VA Puget Sound Health Care System; Hematologics Inc, Seattle, WA; Stanford University, Stanford, CA; University of Leipzig, Leipzig, Germany; Baylor University, Dallas, TX; Oregon Health & Science University, Portland, OR; University of Utah, Salt Lake City, UT; University of Colorado, Denver, CO; Medical College of Wisconsin, Milwaukee, WI; University of Torino, Torino, Italy; and Emory University, Atlanta, GA
Abstract
PurposePatients with chemotherapy-refractory chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) have a short life expectancy. The aim of this study was to analyze the outcome of patients with advanced CLL when treated with nonmyeloablative conditioning and hematopoietic cell transplantation (HCT).Patients and MethodsSixty-four patients diagnosed with advanced CLL were treated with nonmyeloablative conditioning (2 Gy total-body irradiation with [n = 53] or without [n = 11] fludarabine) and HCT from related (n = 44) or unrelated (n = 20) donors. An adapted form of the Charlson comorbidity index was used to assess pretransplantation comorbidities.ResultsSixty-one of 64 patients had sustained engraftment, whereas three patients rejected their grafts. The incidences of grades 2, 3, and 4 acute and chronic graft-versus-host disease were 39%, 14%, 2%, and 50%, respectively. Three patients who underwent transplantation in complete remission (CR) remained in CR. The overall response rate among 61 patients with measurable disease was 67% (50% CR), whereas 5% had stable disease. All patients with morphologic CR who were tested by polymerase chain reaction (n = 11) achieved negative molecular results, and one of these patients subsequently experienced disease relapse. The 2-year incidence of relapse/progression was 26%, whereas the 2-year relapse and nonrelapse mortalities were 18% and 22%, respectively. Two-year rates of overall and disease-free survivals were 60% and 52%, respectively. Unrelated HCT resulted in higher CR and lower relapse rates than related HCT, suggesting more effective graft-versus-leukemia activity.ConclusionCLL is susceptible to graft-versus-leukemia effects, and allogeneic HCT after nonmyeloablative conditioning might prolong median survival for patients with advanced CLL.
Publisher
American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO)
Subject
Cancer Research,Oncology
Reference67 articles.
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