23 results on '"Björkholm, M."'
Search Results
2. Allogeneic, but not autologous, hematopoietic cell transplantation improves survival only among younger adults with acute lymphoblastic leukemia in first remission: an individual patient data meta-analysis
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Gupta, V, Richards, S, Rowe, J, Büchner, T, Hiddemann, W, Sauerland, C, Amadori, S, Rondelli, R, Testi, Am, Attal, M, Jourdan, E, Reiffers, J, Howman, A, Patel, S, Jacobs, P, Lee, S, Brunet, S, Sierra, J, Alonzo, T, Aplenc, R, Sung, L, Cutler, C, Sun, Z, Tallman, M, Ljungman, P, Labar, B, Willemze, R, Suciu, S, Collette, S, Dombret, H, Thomas, X, Ifrah, N, Hunault-Berger, M, Mandelli, F, Vignetti, M, Tsimberidou, Am, Pagnano, K, da Souza CA, Miranda, Ec, Diaz de Heredia, C, Ortega, Jj, Cornelissen, Jj, van der Holt, B, Oh, H, Takeuchi, J, Kaizer, H, Björkholm, M, Rosenborg, A, Keating, M, Zander, A, Fielding, A, Goldstone, A, Moorman, Av, Bassan, R, Ravindranath, Y, Weinstein, H, Oriol, A, Ribera, Jm, Powles, R, Appelbaum, F, Baker, Luigi, Coltman, C, Crowley, J, Kopecky, K, Messner, H, Akan, H, Beksac, M, Hills, R, Buck, G, Davies, K, Elphinstone, T, Evans, V, Gettins, L, Gregory, C, James, S, Mackinnon, L, Mchugh, T, Morris, P, Wade, R, and Wheatley, K.
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Oncology ,Homologous ,Adult ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Age Factors ,Aged ,Aged, 80 and over ,Antineoplastic Agents ,Child ,Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation ,Humans ,Middle Aged ,Precursor Cell Lymphoblastic Leukemia-Lymphoma ,Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic ,Transplantation, Autologous ,Transplantation, Homologous ,Young Adult ,Hematology ,Biochemistry ,Cell Biology ,Immunology ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Hematopoietic stem cell transplantation ,law.invention ,Randomized controlled trial ,law ,Acute lymphocytic leukemia ,Internal medicine ,80 and over ,Medicine ,Young adult ,Chemotherapy ,Transplantation ,Lymphoid Neoplasia ,business.industry ,Absolute risk reduction ,medicine.disease ,Surgery ,Adult Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia ,business ,Autologous - Abstract
Hematopoietic cell transplantation (HCT) and prolonged chemotherapy are standard postremission strategies for adult acute lymphoblastic leukemia in first complete remission, but the optimal strategy remains controversial. There are no randomized trials of allogeneic HCT. In the present study, updated individual patient data were collected and analyzed from studies with information on availability of matched sibling donor (used to mimic randomization) and from randomized trials of autograft versus chemotherapy. Data from 13 studies including 2962 patients, excluding Philadelphia chromosome–positive patients, showed a survival benefit for having a matched sibling donor for patients < 35 years of age (OR = 0.79; 95% CI, 0.70-0.90, P = .0003) but not for those ≥ 35 years of age (OR = 1.01; 95% CI, 0.85-1.19, P = .9; heterogeneity P = .03) because of the higher absolute risk of nonrelapse mortality for older patients. No differences were seen by risk group. There was a trend toward inferior survival for autograft versus chemotherapy (OR = 1.18; 95% CI, 0.99-1.41; P = .06). No beneficial effect of autografting was seen compared with chemotherapy in this analysis. We conclude that matched sibling donor myeloablative HCT improves survival only for younger patients, with an absolute benefit of approximately 10% at 5 years. Improved chemotherapy outcomes and reduced nonrelapse mortality associated with allogeneic HCT may change the relative effects of these treatments in the future.
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- 2013
3. Sorafenib has potent antitumor activity against multiple myeloma in vitro, ex vivo, and in vivo in the 5T33MM mouse model
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Hendrik De Raeve, Kharaziha, P., Fristedt, C., Li, Q., Gruber, A., Johnsson, P., Kokaraki, G., Panzar, M., Laane, E., Osterborg, A., Zhivotovsky, B., Jernberg-Wiklund, H., Grandér, D., Celsing, F., Björkholm, M., Karin Vanderkerken, Panaretakis, T., Hematology, and Immunology and Microbiology
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BCL-2 FAMILY-MEMBERS ,DOWN-REGULATION ,immune system diseases ,hemic and lymphatic diseases ,BONE-MARROW ,APOPTOSIS-INDUCING FACTOR ,neoplasms - Abstract
Multiple myeloma (MM) is a B-cell malignancy characterized by the expansion of clonal plasma blasts/plasma cells within the bone marrow that relies on multiple signaling cascades, including tyrosine kinase activated pathways, to proliferate and evade cell death. Despite emerging new treatment strategies, multiple myeloma remains at present incurable. Thus, novel approaches targeting several signaling cascades by using the multi-tyrosine kinase inhibitor (TKI), sorafenib, seem a promising treatment approach for multiple myeloma. Here, we show that sorafenib induces cell death in multiple myeloma cell lines and in CD138(+)-enriched primary multiple myeloma patient samples in a caspase-dependent and -independent manner. Furthermore, sorafenib has a strong antitumoral and -angiogenic activity in the 5T33MM mouse model leading to increased overall survival. Multiple myeloma cells undergo autophagy in response to sorafenib, and inhibition of this cytoprotective pathway potentiated the efficacy of this TKI. Mcl-1, asurvival factor in multiple myeloma, is downregulated at the protein level by sorafenib allowing for the execution of cell death, as ectopic overexpression of this protein protects multiple myeloma cells. Concomitant targeting of Mcl-1 by sorafenib and of Bcl-2/Bcl-xL by the antagonist ABT737 improves the efficacy of sorafenib in multiple myeloma cell lines and CD138(+)-enriched primary cells in the presence of bone marrow stromal cells. Altogether, our data support the use of sorafenib as a novel therapeutic modality against human multiple myeloma, and its efficacy may be potentiated in combination with ABT737.
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- 2012
4. Exon-based transcriptome profiling reveals genes that have prognostic impact on the survival of young high risk diffuse large B-cellYfollicular grade 3 lymphoma patients with dose-dense chemoimmunotherapy and CNS prophylaxis. Results from a Nordic Lymphoma Group phase II study
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Koivula, S, Taskinen, M, Chen, P, Holte, H, Delabie, J, Karjalainen-Lindsberg, ML, Björkholm, M, Fluge, O, Pedersen, LM, Jerkeman, M, Eriksson, M, Hautaniemi, S, and Leppa, S
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- 2011
5. Intravenous immunoglobulin treatment in cytopenic haematological disorders
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Björkholm M
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Purpura, Thrombocytopenic, Idiopathic ,Chemotherapy ,Neutropenia ,biology ,business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Immunoglobulins, Intravenous ,Red-Cell Aplasia, Pure ,Immunoglobulin E ,Hematologic Diseases ,Immunology ,Internal Medicine ,biology.protein ,Humans ,Medicine ,Anemia, Hemolytic, Autoimmune ,Antibody ,business ,Haematological disorders - Published
- 1993
- Full Text
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6. High serum vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) level is an adverse prognostic factor in high risk diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL) patients treated with dose-dense immunochemotherapy as systemic CNS prophylaxis. Results from a Nordic phase II study
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Riihijarvi, S, Nyman, H, Holte, H, Björkholm, M, Fluge, O, Pedersen, LM, Jerkeman, M, Eriksson, M, and Leppa, S
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- 2010
7. Aplastic anaemia: pathogenetic mechanisms and treatment with special reference to immunomodulation
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Björkholm M
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Adult ,T-Lymphocytes ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Cyclosporin a ,Internal Medicine ,Humans ,Medicine ,Aplastic anemia ,Survival rate ,Antilymphocyte Serum ,Bone Marrow Transplantation ,Immunosuppression Therapy ,business.industry ,Anemia, Aplastic ,Immunosuppression ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Pancytopenia ,Transplantation ,Treatment Outcome ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Hypocellularity ,Immunology ,Cyclosporine ,Immunotherapy ,Bone marrow ,business - Abstract
Aplastic anaemia (AA) has been defined as a syndrome in which the presence of pancytopenia is accompanied by marrow hypocellularity. Ample laboratory data and clinical observations continue to make immune mediation of bone-marrow failure an attractive hypothesis. Recent progress in the practice of bone-marrow transplantation has led to a survival rate of approximately 80% in the best cases, but such a treatment is only amenable in young patients (< 45–50 years) with HLA-identical bone-marrow donors. Anti-lymphocyte and thymocyte globulin treatment has been surprisingly effective for AA, resulting in transfusion independence in 40–80% of patients. The mechanism of action is unknown, although effects on immunosuppression appear to be the most likely candidates. Long-term results for patients receiving cyclosporin A treatment will soon be available, and preliminary data show an effect similar to that of antithymocyte globulin. In contrast to successful bone-marrow transplantation, improvement following immunomodulation leaves quantitative abnormalities in all haematopoietic cell lines, and patients are prone to develop clonal (malignant) disease.
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- 1992
- Full Text
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8. Marrow versus peripheral blood for geno-identical allogeneic stem cell transplantation in acute myelocytic leukemia: Influence of dose and stem cell source shows better outcome with rich marrow
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Gorin N.C., Labopin M., Rocha V., Arcese W., Beksac M., Gluckman E., Ringden O., Ruutu T., Reiffers J., Bandini G., Falda M., Zikos P., Willemze R., Frassoni F., Abecasis M., Abráhamová J., Afanassiev B.V., Aglietta M., Alabdulaaly A., Aleinikova O., Paolo Alessandrino E., Al Shemmari S.H., Amadori D., Amadori S., Amos T., Andolina M., Andreesen R., Angelucci E., Anhuf J., Arnold R., Arpaci F., Attal M., Azevedo W., Azim H.A., Baccarani M., Bacigalupo A., Barbui T., Bargetzi M., Barnard D.L., Bartsch H.H., Baruchel A., Battista C., Bay J.-O., Bayik M., Bazarbachi A., Beguin Y., López J.L.B., Benedek I., Benedetti F., Bengala C., Berrebi A., Besalduch J., Biesma D., Biron P., Björkholm M., Blaise D., Blesing N.E., Boasson M., Bobev D., Boccadoro M., Bolaman Z., Boogaerts M.A., Bordessoule D., Bosi A., Aida B.S., Bourhis J.H., Bourikas G., Bowen D.T., Bregni M., Bries G., Brinch L., Brittain D., Bron D., Brune M., Bullorsky E.O., Bunjes D., Burdach S., Burnett A.K., Buzyn A., Caballero D., Cagirgan S., Cahn J.-Y., Canepa C.O., Cao A., Carella A.M., Carrera F.D., Carret A.-S., Cascinu S., Castel V., Caswell M., Cavanna L., Cetto G.L., Chapuis B., Chasty R., Chen Y.-C., Chisesi T., Chopra R., Chybicka A., Clark R.E., Colombat P., Colovic M.D., Constenla-Figueiras M., Contreras M., Contu L., Cordonnier C., Cornelissen J.J., Cornish J., Coser P., Costa N., Coze C., Craddock C., Crown J., Culligan D.J., Danova M., Darbyshire P.J., Davies J.M., de Bock R., de Pablos Gallego J.M., De Prijck B., de Revel T., De Rossi G., De Souza C.A., Deb G., Degos L., Demuynck H., Dervenoulas I., Di Bartolomeo P., Di Renzo N., Diaz M.A., Diehl V., Diez-Martin J.L., Dincer S., Giorgio D., Dmoszynska A., Doelken G., Peter P.D., Dulley F., Easow J., Ebell W., Efremidis A., Ehninger G., Eichler H., Eimermacher H., Enno A., Errazquin L., Aguado J.E., Everaus H., Fagioli F., Fanin R., Fassas A., Fasth A., Faulkner L.B., Fauser A.A., Feldman L., Feremans W., Ferhanoglu B., Fernández M.N., Fernández-Ranada J.M., Ferrant A., Ferrara F., Finke J., Fischer A., Fischer J., Fitzsimons T., Floristan F., Forjaz de Lacerda J.M.F., Fossati-Bellani F., Fosser V., Franklin I., Freund M., Frickhofen N., Gabbas A., Gadner H., Gallamini A., Galvin M.C., López J.G., García-Conde J., Gaska T., Gastl G., Gedikoglu G., Ghavamzadeh A., Gianni A., Gibson B.E., Gil J.L., Gilleece M.H., Gisselbrecht C., Glass B., Gmür J., Göbel U., Goldman J.M., Goldstone A.H., San Miguel J.D.G., González-López M.-A., Grafakos S., Gramatzki M., Grañena A., Gratecos N., Gratwohl A., Greinix H.T., Gugliotta L., Guilhot F., Guimaraes J.E., Gülbas Z., Gulyuz O., Gurman G., Gutierrez M.M., Haas R., Hamladji R.-M., Hamon M.D., Hansen N.E., Harhalakis N., Harousseau J.L., Hartenstein R., Hartmann C.O., Hausmaninger H., Haznedar R., Heit W., Hellmann A., Herrmann R.P., Hertenstein B., Hess U., Hinterberger W., Ho A.D., Hoelzer D., Holowiecki J., Horst H.-A., Hossfeld D.K., Huebsch L., Hunter A.E., Iacopino P., Iannitto E., Indrák K., Iriondo A., Izzi T., Jackson G.L., Jacobs P., Jacobsen N., Janvier M., Jebavy L., Joensuu H., Joerg S., Jones F.G.C., Jouet J.P., Joyner M.V., Juliusson G., Jürgens H., Kalayoglu-Besisik S., Kalman N., Kalmanti M., Kansoy S., Kansu E., Kanz L., Karianakis G., Kernéis Y., Khalifeh O., Khomenko V., Kienast J., Killick S., Kirchner H.H., Klingebiel T., Knauf W., Koenigsmann M., Koistinen P., Koivunen E., Kolb H.-J., Kolbe K., Koller E., Komarnicki M., Koscielniak E., Kovacsovics T., Kowalczyk J.R., Koza V., Kozak T., Kugler J., Kuliczkowski K., Kvaloy S., Labar B., Laciura P., Palacios J.J.L., Lakota J., Lambertenghi D.G., Lange A., Lanza F., Isasti R.L., Lauria F., Le Moine F., Leblond V., Lelli G., Lenhoff S., Leon L.A., Leoncini-Franscini L., Leone G., Leoni P., Levis A., Leyvraz S., Liberati M., Link H., Linkesch W., Liso V., Lisukov I.A., Littlewood T., Ljungman P., Locatelli F., Losonczy H., Lotz J.-P., Ludwig H., Lukac J., Lutz D., Macchia P., Madrigal A., Maiolino A., Majolino I., Eloy-García J.M., Malesevic M., Mandelli F., Marc A., Marcus R., Marianska B., Markuljak I., Marsh J.C.W., Martelli M.F., Marti Tutusaus J.M., Martin S., Martin M., Martinelli G., Martínez-Rubio A.M., Martoni A., Maschan A., Maschmeyer G., Masszi T., Mazza P., McCann S., Meier C.R., Messina C., Mettivier V., Metzner B., Michallet M., Michieli M., Michon J., Milligan D.W., Milone J.H., Giuseppe G.M., Minigo H., Mistrik M., Moicean A.D., Monfardini S., Montserrat E., Moraleda Jimenez J.M., Morales-Lazaro A., Morandi S., Morra E., Mufti G.J., Musso M., Nagler A., Nalli G., Naparstek E., Narni F., Nenadov-Beck M., Neubauer A., Newland A.C., Niederwieser D., Niethammer D., Noens L.A., Nousiainen T., Novik A., Novitzky N., Occhini D., Odriozolas J., Ojanguren J.M., O’meara A., Onat H., Orchard K., Ortega J.J., Osieka R., Ossenkoppele G.J., Othman B., Ovali E., Ozcebe O.I., Ozerkan K., Ozturk A., Papatryfonos A., Parker J.E., Pastore M., Patrone F., Patton N., Pejin D., Peñarrubia M.J., Equiza E.P., Peschel C., Pession A., Pigaditou A., Pignon B., Pihkala U., Pimentel P., Pitini V., Podoltseva E., Pogliani E.M., Anna A.P., Porta F., Potter M., Powles R., Prentice G.H., Pretnar J., Ptushkin V., Quarta G., Reiter A., Remes K., Reykdal S., Santasusana J.M.R., Rifón J., Rio B., Rizzoli V., Robak T., Robinson A.J., Rodeghiero F., Rodríguez Fernández J.M., Rombos Y., Romeril K.R., Rosenmayr A., Rossi J.F., Rosti G., Rotoli B., Rowe J.M., Russell N.H., Ryzhak O., Rzepecki P., Saglio G., Salwender H., Samonigg H., Santoro A., Sanz M.A., Sayer H.G., Scanni A., Schaafsma M.R., Schaefer U.W., Schanz U., Schattenberg A., Schey S.A.M., Schlimok G., Schmoll H.-J., Schots R., Schouten H., Schwarer A.P., Schwerdtfeger R., Scimè R., Segel E., Seger R., Selleslag D., Serban M., Shamaa S., Shaw P.J., Siegert W., Siena S., Sierra J., Simonsson B., Singer C.R.J., Sirchia G., Skotnicki A.B., Slavin S., Snowden J., Sotto J.J., Tanyeli A., Tedeschi L., Tidefelt U., Tissot J.-D., Tobler A., Tomas J.F., Torres J.P., Torres G.A., Touraine J.-L., Trneny M., Uderzo C., Unal E., Unal A., Undar L., Urban C., Van den Berg H., van Marwijk K.M., Vellenga E., Venturini M., Verdonck L.F., Veys P., Vilardell J., Vinante O., Visani G., Vitek A., Vivancos P., Volpe E., Vora A., Vorlicek J., Vowels M., Vujic D., Wachowiak J., Wagner T., Wahlin A., Walewski J., Wandt H., Weissinger F., Wijermans P.W., Wiktor-Jedrzejczak W., Will A.M., Woell E., Wörmann B., Yaniv I., Yesilipek M.A., Yilmaz U., Yong A., Zachée P., Zambelli A., Zander A.R., Zintl F., Zoumbos N.C., Çukurova Üniversitesi, Maltepe Üniversitesi, and Ege Üniversitesi
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Myeloid ,Male ,Pathology ,Time Factors ,Graft vs Host Disease ,Biochemistry ,Gastroenterology ,Blood cell ,Bone Marrow ,Child ,Bone Marrow Transplantation ,Leukemia ,Remission Induction ,Hematology ,Middle Aged ,Prognosis ,Leukemia, Myeloid, Acute ,ComputingMilieux_MANAGEMENTOFCOMPUTINGANDINFORMATIONSYSTEMS ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Treatment Outcome ,Child, Preschool ,Female ,Stem cell ,InformationSystems_MISCELLANEOUS ,Homologous ,Adult ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Immunology ,Acute ,Disease-Free Survival ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Transplantation, Homologous ,Humans ,Preschool ,Aged ,Transplantation ,business.industry ,ComputerSystemsOrganization_COMPUTER-COMMUNICATIONNETWORKS ,Cell Biology ,medicine.disease ,Peripheral blood ,Histocompatibility ,Multivariate Analysis ,Stem Cell Transplantation ,ComputingMethodologies_PATTERNRECOGNITION ,Myelocytic leukemia ,Bone marrow ,business ,Settore MED/15 - Malattie del Sangue - Abstract
PubMed ID: 12829583, Several studies have compared bone marrow (BM) and peripheral blood (PB) as stem cell sources in patients receiving allografts, but the cell doses infused have not been considered, especially for BM. Using the ALWP/EBMT registry, we retrospectively studied 881 adult patients with acute myelocytic leukemia (AML), who received a non-T-depleted allogeneic BM (n = 515) or mobilized PB (n = 366) standard transplant, in first remission (CR1), from an HLA-identical sibling, over a 5-year period from January 1994. The BM cell dose ranged from 0.17 to 29 × 10 8 /kg with a median of 2.7 × 10 8 /kg. The PB cell dose ranged from 0.02 to 77 × 10 8 /kg with a median of 9.3 × 10 8 /kg. The median dose for patients receiving BM (2.7 × 10 8 /kg) gave the greatest discrimination. In multivariate analyses, high-dose BM compared to PB was associated with lower transplant-related mortality (RR = 0.61; 95% CI, 0.39-0.98; P = .04), better leukemia-free survival (RR = 0.65; 95% CI, 0.46-0.91; P = .013), and better overall survival (RR = 0.64; 95% CI, 0.44-0. 92; P = .016). The present study in patients with AML receiving allografts in first remission indicates a better outcome with BM as compared to PB, when the dose of BM infused is rich. © 2003 by The American Society of Hematology.
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- 2003
9. Marrow versus peripheral blood for geno-identical allogeneic stem cell transplantation in acute myelocytic leukemia: Influence of dose and stem cell source shows better outcome with rich marrow
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Gorin, N.C. Labopin, M. Rocha, V. Arcese, W. Beksac, M. Gluckman, E. Ringden, O. Ruutu, T. Reiffers, J. Bandini, G. Falda, M. Zikos, P. Willemze, R. Frassoni, F. Abecasis, M. Abráhamová, J. Afanassiev, B.V. Aglietta, M. Alabdulaaly, A. Aleinikova, O. Paolo Alessandrino, E. Al Shemmari, S.H. Amadori, D. Amadori, S. Amos, T. Andolina, M. Andreesen, R. Angelucci, E. Anhuf, J. Arnold, R. Arpaci, F. Attal, M. Azevedo, W. Azim, H.A. Baccarani, M. Bacigalupo, A. Barbui, T. Bargetzi, M. Barnard, D.L. Bartsch, H.H. Baruchel, A. Battista, C. Bay, J.-O. Bayik, M. Bazarbachi, A. Beguin, Y. López, J.L.B. Benedek, I. Benedetti, F. Bengala, C. Berrebi, A. Besalduch, J. Biesma, D. Biron, P. Björkholm, M. Blaise, D. Blesing, N.E. Boasson, M. Bobev, D. Boccadoro, M. Bolaman, Z. Boogaerts, M.A. Bordessoule, D. Bosi, A. Aida, B.S. Bourhis, J.H. Bourikas, G. Bowen, D.T. Bregni, M. Bries, G. Brinch, L. Brittain, D. Bron, D. Brune, M. Bullorsky, E.O. Bunjes, D. Burdach, S. Burnett, A.K. Buzyn, A. Caballero, D. Cagirgan, S. Cahn, J.-Y. Canepa, C.O. Cao, A. Carella, A.M. Carrera, F.D. Carret, A.-S. Cascinu, S. Castel, V. Caswell, M. Cavanna, L. Cetto, G.L. Chapuis, B. Chasty, R. Chen, Y.-C. Chisesi, T. Chopra, R. Chybicka, A. Clark, R.E. Colombat, P. Colovic, M.D. Constenla-Figueiras, M. Contreras, M. Contu, L. Cordonnier, C. Cornelissen, J.J. Cornish, J. Coser, P. Costa, N. Coze, C. Craddock, C. Crown, J. Culligan, D.J. Danova, M. Darbyshire, P.J. Davies, J.M. de Bock, R. de Pablos Gallego, J.M. De Prijck, B. de Revel, T. De Rossi, G. De Souza, C.A. Deb, G. Degos, L. Demuynck, H. Dervenoulas, I. Di Bartolomeo, P. Di Renzo, N. Diaz, M.A. Diehl, V. Diez-Martin, J.L. Dincer, S. Giorgio, D. Dmoszynska, A. Doelken, G. Peter, P.D. Dulley, F. Easow, J. Ebell, W. Efremidis, A. Ehninger, G. Eichler, H. Eimermacher, H. Enno, A. Errazquin, L. Aguado, J.E. Everaus, H. Fagioli, F. Fanin, R. Fassas, A. Fasth, A. Faulkner, L.B. Fauser, A.A. Feldman, L. Feremans, W. Ferhanoglu, B. Fernández, M.N. Fernández-Ranada, J.M. Ferrant, A. Ferrara, F. Finke, J. Fischer, A. Fischer, J. Fitzsimons, T. Floristan, F. Forjaz de Lacerda, J.M.F. Fossati-Bellani, F. Fosser, V. Franklin, I. Freund, M. Frickhofen, N. Gabbas, A. Gadner, H. Gallamini, A. Galvin, M.C. López, J.G. García-Conde, J. Gaska, T. Gastl, G. Gedikoglu, G. Ghavamzadeh, A. Gianni, A. Gibson, B.E. Gil, J.L. Gilleece, M.H. Gisselbrecht, C. Glass, B. Gmür, J. Göbel, U. Goldman, J.M. Goldstone, A.H. San Miguel, J.D.G. González-López, M.-A. Grafakos, S. Gramatzki, M. Grañena, A. Gratecos, N. Gratwohl, A. Greinix, H.T. Gugliotta, L. Guilhot, F. Guimaraes, J.E. Gülbas, Z. Gulyuz, O. Gurman, G. Gutierrez, M.M. Haas, R. Hamladji, R.-M. Hamon, M.D. Hansen, N.E. Harhalakis, N. Harousseau, J.L. Hartenstein, R. Hartmann, C.O. Hausmaninger, H. Haznedar, R. Heit, W. Hellmann, A. Herrmann, R.P. Hertenstein, B. Hess, U. Hinterberger, W. Ho, A.D. Hoelzer, D. Holowiecki, J. Horst, H.-A. Hossfeld, D.K. Huebsch, L. Hunter, A.E. Iacopino, P. Iannitto, E. Indrák, K. Iriondo, A. Izzi, T. Jackson, G.L. Jacobs, P. Jacobsen, N. Janvier, M. Jebavy, L. Joensuu, H. Joerg, S. Jones, F.G.C. Jouet, J.P. Joyner, M.V. Juliusson, G. Jürgens, H. Kalayoglu-Besisik, S. Kalman, N. Kalmanti, M. Kansoy, S. Kansu, E. Kanz, L. Karianakis, G. Kernéis, Y. Khalifeh, O. Khomenko, V. Kienast, J. Killick, S. Kirchner, H.H. Klingebiel, T. Knauf, W. Koenigsmann, M. Koistinen, P. Koivunen, E. Kolb, H.-J. Kolbe, K. Koller, E. Komarnicki, M. Koscielniak, E. Kovacsovics, T. Kowalczyk, J.R. Koza, V. Kozak, T. Kugler, J. Kuliczkowski, K. Kvaloy, S. Labar, B. Laciura, P. Palacios, J.J.L. Lakota, J. Lambertenghi, D.G. Lange, A. Lanza, F. Isasti, R.L. Lauria, F. Le Moine, F. Leblond, V. Lelli, G. Lenhoff, S. Leon, L.A. Leoncini-Franscini, L. Leone, G. Leoni, P. Levis, A. Leyvraz, S. Liberati, M. Link, H. Linkesch, W. Liso, V. Lisukov, I.A. Littlewood, T. Ljungman, P. Locatelli, F. Losonczy, H. Lotz, J.-P. Ludwig, H. Lukac, J. Lutz, D. Macchia, P. Madrigal, A. Maiolino, A. Majolino, I. Eloy-García, J.M. Malesevic, M. Mandelli, F. Marc, A. Marcus, R. Marianska, B. Markuljak, I. Marsh, J.C.W. Martelli, M.F. Marti Tutusaus, J.M. Martin, S. Martin, M. Martinelli, G. Martínez-Rubio, A.M. Martoni, A. Maschan, A. Maschmeyer, G. Masszi, T. Mazza, P. McCann, S. Meier, C.R. Messina, C. Mettivier, V. Metzner, B. Michallet, M. Michieli, M. Michon, J. Milligan, D.W. Milone, J.H. Giuseppe, G.M. Minigo, H. Mistrik, M. Moicean, A.D. Monfardini, S. Montserrat, E. Moraleda Jimenez, J.M. Morales-Lazaro, A. Morandi, S. Morra, E. Mufti, G.J. Musso, M. Nagler, A. Nalli, G. Naparstek, E. Narni, F. Nenadov-Beck, M. Neubauer, A. Newland, A.C. Niederwieser, D. Niethammer, D. Noens, L.A. Nousiainen, T. Novik, A. Novitzky, N. Occhini, D. Odriozolas, J. Ojanguren, J.M. O’meara, A. Onat, H. Orchard, K. Ortega, J.J. Osieka, R. Ossenkoppele, G.J. Othman, B. Ovali, E. Ozcebe, O.I. Ozerkan, K. Ozturk, A. Papatryfonos, A. Parker, J.E. Pastore, M. Patrone, F. Patton, N. Pejin, D. Peñarrubia, M.J. Equiza, E.P. Peschel, C. Pession, A. Pigaditou, A. Pignon, B. Pihkala, U. Pimentel, P. Pitini, V. Podoltseva, E. Pogliani, E.M. Anna, A.P. Porta, F. Potter, M. Powles, R. Prentice, G.H. Pretnar, J. Ptushkin, V. Quarta, G. Reiter, A. Remes, K. Reykdal, S. Santasusana, J.M.R. Rifón, J. Rio, B. Rizzoli, V. Robak, T. Robinson, A.J. Rodeghiero, F. Rodríguez Fernández, J.M. Rombos, Y. Romeril, K.R. Rosenmayr, A. Rossi, J.F. Rosti, G. Rotoli, B. Rowe, J.M. Russell, N.H. Ryzhak, O. Rzepecki, P. Saglio, G. Salwender, H. Samonigg, H. Santoro, A. Sanz, M.A. Sayer, H.G. Scanni, A. Schaafsma, M.R. Schaefer, U.W. Schanz, U. Schattenberg, A. Schey, S.A.M. Schlimok, G. Schmoll, H.-J. Schots, R. Schouten, H. Schwarer, A.P. Schwerdtfeger, R. Scimè, R. Segel, E. Seger, R. Selleslag, D. Serban, M. Shamaa, S. Shaw, P.J. Siegert, W. Siena, S. Sierra, J. Simonsson, B. Singer, C.R.J. Sirchia, G. Skotnicki, A.B. Slavin, S. Snowden, J. Sotto, J.J. Tanyeli, A. Tedeschi, L. Tidefelt, U. Tissot, J.-D. Tobler, A. Tomas, J.F. Torres, J.P. Torres, G.A. Touraine, J.-L. Trneny, M. Uderzo, C. Unal, E. Unal, A. Undar, L. Urban, C. Van den Berg, H. van Marwijk, K.M. Vellenga, E. Venturini, M. Verdonck, L.F. Veys, P. Vilardell, J. Vinante, O. Visani, G. Vitek, A. Vivancos, P. Volpe, E. Vora, A. Vorlicek, J. Vowels, M. Vujic, D. Wachowiak, J. Wagner, T. Wahlin, A. Walewski, J. Wandt, H. Weissinger, F. Wijermans, P.W. Wiktor-Jedrzejczak, W. Will, A.M. Woell, E. Wörmann, B. Yaniv, I. Yesilipek, M.A. Yilmaz, U. Yong, A. Zachée, P. Zambelli, A. Zander, A.R. Zintl, F. Zoumbos, N.C. The Acute Leukemia Working Party (ALWP) of the European Cooperative Group for Blood Marrow Transplantation (EBMT)
- Abstract
Several studies have compared bone marrow (BM) and peripheral blood (PB) as stem cell sources in patients receiving allografts, but the cell doses infused have not been considered, especially for BM. Using the ALWP/EBMT registry, we retrospectively studied 881 adult patients with acute myelocytic leukemia (AML), who received a non-T-depleted allogeneic BM (n = 515) or mobilized PB (n = 366) standard transplant, in first remission (CR1), from an HLA-identical sibling, over a 5-year period from January 1994. The BM cell dose ranged from 0.17 to 29 × 108/kg with a median of 2.7 × 108/kg. The PB cell dose ranged from 0.02 to 77 × 10 8/kg with a median of 9.3 × 108/kg. The median dose for patients receiving BM (2.7 × 108/kg) gave the greatest discrimination. In multivariate analyses, high-dose BM compared to PB was associated with lower transplant-related mortality (RR = 0.61; 95% CI, 0.39-0.98; P = .04), better leukemia-free survival (RR = 0.65; 95% CI, 0.46-0.91; P = .013), and better overall survival (RR = 0.64; 95% CI, 0.44-0. 92; P = .016). The present study in patients with AML receiving allografts in first remission indicates a better outcome with BM as compared to PB, when the dose of BM infused is rich. © 2003 by The American Society of Hematology.
- Published
- 2003
10. Fludarabine and plasma cell leukemia
- Author
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Osby E and Björkholm M
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Plasma cell leukemia ,Oncology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Internal medicine ,Immunology ,Medicine ,Hematology ,General Medicine ,business ,medicine.disease ,Fludarabine ,medicine.drug - Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Acute lymphoblastic leukemias from relapse engraft more rapidly in SCID mice
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Ak, Palucka, Scuderi R, Anna Porwit, Jeha S, Gruber A, Björkholm M, Beran M, and Pisa P
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Adult ,Adolescent ,Cell Cycle ,Graft Survival ,Mice, SCID ,Middle Aged ,Precursor Cell Lymphoblastic Leukemia-Lymphoma ,Polymerase Chain Reaction ,Mice ,Recurrence ,Animals ,Humans ,ATP Binding Cassette Transporter, Subfamily B, Member 1 ,RNA, Messenger ,Neoplasm Transplantation - Abstract
It is generally believed that relapse of acute leukemia heralds progression of the disease into a more aggressive stage. The biological behavior of leukemic cells collected from four patients with adult acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) prior to treatment and at relapse was studied after engraftment into 28 unconditioned mice with severe combined immunodeficiency (SCID). Leukemic cells engrafted in all but one mouse, with major differences observed in the growth and aggressiveness of the leukemias. Recipient mice of cells derived from all patients at relapse died more rapidly in overt leukemia than those which were injected with cells obtained prior to induction treatment (P=0.0002). SCID mice that received cells from one patient at the time of diagnosis also died in terminal leukemia. Other SCID mice however, that received cells from the remaining three patients prior to treatment developed occult leukemia that was detectable in the blood or bone marrow with the use of polymerase chain reaction (PCR) or flow cytometry only. Leukemic cells recovered from mice with terminal leukemia exhibited a larger proliferating fraction than cells originally injected (P=0.004). Our results demonstrate, that during the evolution from initial presentation to relapse, ALL cells may acquire biological properties which render them more aggressive in SCID mice.
- Published
- 1996
12. The 5-lipoxygenase pathway in normal and malignant human B lymphocytes
- Author
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Pj, Jakobsson, Larsson P, Feltenmark S, Odlander B, Runarsson G, Björkholm M, and Hans-Erik Claesson
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B-Lymphocytes ,Kinetics ,Leukotrienes ,Arachidonate 5-Lipoxygenase ,Arachidonic Acid ,Leukocytes ,Gene Expression ,Humans ,Hydrogen Peroxide ,Burkitt Lymphoma ,Cell Line ,Granulocytes - Published
- 1995
13. Surface markers and cytotoxic activity of blood natural killer cells studied at the single cell level in Hodgkin's disease
- Author
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Jezewska, E, Björkholm, M, Giscombe, R, Holm, G, and Tullgren, O
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Adult ,Cytotoxicity, Immunologic ,Antibodies, Monoclonal ,Middle Aged ,Hodgkin Disease ,Cell Line ,Killer Cells, Natural ,Leukocyte Count ,Phenotype ,Antigens, Surface ,Interferon Type I ,Humans ,Research Article ,Aged - Abstract
Purified peripheral blood lymphocytes (PBL) from nine untreated patients with Hodgkin's disease (HD), two HD patients in complete remission and 17 healthy donors were studied for natural killer (NK) cell activity against the K-562 cell line using a single cell cytotoxic assay, which allowed enumeration of effector cells and characterization of their surface membrane phenotypes after staining with monoclonal antibodies. The frequency of NK cells was significantly lower in HD patients than in controls (mean % +/- s.d., 1.9 +/- 0.9 and 2.8 +/- 1.2, respectively), while the fraction of target binding cells was similar in the two groups. The fraction of cytotoxic lymphocytes increased after pre-treatment of PBL with 500 iu leucocyte interferon in all tested control donors (n = 12) and the two patients in remission but only in four of seven untreated patients. No relation between the impaired NK cell frequency and age, tumour histology and clinical stage could be revealed. Subtyping of the target cell binding NK cells by monoclonal antibodies disclosed a marked heterogeneity of effector cells. NK effector cells reactive with M1 and anti-Ia antibodies were enriched while T3+ and T4+ NK lymphocytes tended to be reduced as compared to PBL. There was no difference between patients and healthy donors with regard to the surface antigen patterns of NK cells. Interferon treatment did not alter significantly the phenotypic characteristics of cytotoxic lymphocytes in patients and controls. It is concluded that the impairment of NK cell activity in HD is partly attributed to a lower frequency of cytotoxic effector cells among a normal number of target binding cells. The defect could not be attributed to a selective defect of effector cell subsets.
- Published
- 1985
14. Lymphocyte counts and functions in arterial and venous splenic blood of patients with Hodgkin's disease. Evidence for elimination of spontaneously DNA synthesizing cells in the spleen
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Björkholm, M, Holm, G, Askergren, J, and Mellstedt, H
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Adult ,Male ,DNA ,Middle Aged ,Lymphocyte Activation ,Hodgkin Disease ,Leukocyte Count ,Splenic Vein ,Humans ,Female ,Lymphocytes ,Mitogens ,Splenic Artery ,Spleen ,Research Article ,Aged - Abstract
Lymphocyte counts and functional competence of lymphocytes from arterial and venous splenic blood were studied in six patients with Hodgkin's disease subjected to splenectomy. One patient was untreated, four were tested after mantle field treatment and a sixth patient had a splenic relapse after total nodal radiotherapy. The percentage of E binding cells in splenic venous blood was lower than that of arterial blood though no significant differences were found in total lymphocyte or E binding cell counts. The spontaneous lymphocyte DNA synthesis was lower in venous than in arterial splenic lymphocytes in all patients. Pokeweed mitogen (PWM)-induced DNA synthesis was much lower in lymphocytes from splenic venous blood than in those from arterial blood in two patients and marginally decreased in another two. The pattern of concanavalin A response was similar to that of PWM. The elimination of lymphocytes over the spleen could not be related to the presence of lymphocytotoxic serum factors or to splenic weight or histologically verified tumour involvement. The results support the notion that some facets of the blood lymphocyte abnormalities in Hodgkin's disease may be explained by removal of functionally active lymphocyte subpopulations in the spleen. It is also concluded that spontaneously activated lymphoid cells are detained in the spleen.
- Published
- 1983
15. Immunological characterization of Hodgkin's and non-Hodgkin's lymphoma patients with high antibody titers against Epstein-Barr virus-associated antigens
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Masucci G, Mellstedt H, Maria Masucci, Szigeti R, Ernberg I, Björkholm M, Tsukuda K, Henle G, Henle W, and Pearson G
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Herpesvirus 4, Human ,Lymphoma ,Antibody-Dependent Cell Cytotoxicity ,Antigen-Antibody Complex ,Middle Aged ,Hodgkin Disease ,Antibodies ,Epstein-Barr Virus Nuclear Antigens ,Humans ,Female ,Antigens, Viral ,Aged - Abstract
We have studied nine Hodgkin's lymphoma (HD) and ten non-Hodgkin's lymphoma (NHL) patients with extraordinarily high anti-viral capsid antigen (VCA) titers (greater than 5120). Controls were 13 HD and 23 NHL patients with anti-VCA titers between 40 and 2560. High anti-VCA titers were present in NHL patients at the time of diagnosis or within 16 months, whereas the rise of anti-VCA titers in HD patients appeared to be a late event during the clinical course of the disease (mean time from diagnosis, 68 months). In particular, we have asked whether the exceptionally high anti-Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) titers in some HD and NHL patients can be correlated to some of the EBV-specific and -nonspecific parameters of cell-mediated immunity. The battery of non-EBV-specific immunological tests included the assessment of natural killer cell activity and the analysis of T-lymphocyte subclasses according to surface markers, together with spontaneous and mitogen-induced DNA synthesis and their helper or suppressor activity on PWM-generated immunoglobulin synthesis. Outgrowth inhibition (Ol) and leukocyte migration inhibition were used to assess EBV-specific cell-mediated immunity. The majority of the high-titer HD and NHL patients showed a drastically reduced OKT4:OKT8 ratio in their peripheral lymphocyte population. Low-titer HD and NHL patients showed no such reduction. There was no strict correlation between the number of OKT8-positive cells and suppressor activity in the functional PWM-induced immunoglobulin production test. Part of the high-titer HD patients showed defective cellular responses in the outgrowth inhibition test, directed against the proliferation of EBV-transformed (EBV-determined nuclear antigen-positive) cells. Some of them showed also a deficient leukocyte migration inhibition response to EBV-determined nuclear antigen but, interestingly, not to early antigen-VCA. In the NHL group, only one of the high-titer patients showed a similar defect. None of the low-titer HD and NHL patients showed such defects.
- Published
- 1984
16. A simple method for electronic counting of rosette forming human blood lymphocytes
- Author
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Sandberg, G and Björkholm, M
- Subjects
Leukocyte Count ,Rosette Formation ,Lymphoma ,Humans ,Lymphocytes ,Electronics ,Research Article ,Leukemia, Lymphoid - Abstract
We investigated the possibility of using a standard electronic laboratory cell counter, of a type which permits manual settings of discriminator and sensitivity levels, for the quantitation of E rosette forming human blood lymphocytes. The electronic counting was performed on rosette specimens prepared from 10 healthy donors, nine lymphoma patients and eight patients with chronic lymphocytic leukaemia (CLL) of B cell type. The simple procedure which was earlier developed for the electronic counting of thymocyte rosettes in guinea-pigs was used and now supplemented with a method for rapid, graphical determination of rosette frequency. The low level of E rosettes in CLL patients was easily distinguished from the higher level seen in the other groups and there was a good agreement between electronic and visual determinations. In samples with a high rosette frequency, the cell counter initially gave 10-30% lower values than when recorded visually. This discrepancy was corrected, however, by a minor adjustment of discriminator level and the introduction of a correction procedure for the presence of double rosettes. We conclude that the electronic counter can well be used for the counting of human rosette forming blood lymphocytes and, due to a high precision and large capacity, this approach would prove to be useful when screening of a large number of samples is required.
- Published
- 1985
17. Multiple Myeloma, Waldenström's Macroglobulinemia, and Benign Monoclonal Gammopathy: Characteristics of The B Cell Clone, Immunoregulatory Cell Populations and Clinical Implications
- Author
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Håkan Mellstedt, Björkholm M, and Göran Holm
- Subjects
Macroglobulinemia ,Biology ,medicine.disease ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Immunology ,Monoclonal ,medicine ,biology.protein ,Plasmacytoma ,Bone marrow ,Antibody ,Clone (B-cell biology) ,B cell ,Multiple myeloma - Abstract
Publisher Summary Multiple myeloma is the most well recognized of these diseases and has attracted great interest not only for the clinicians but also for immunologists and chemists. Thus, myeloma cells in mouse and in man represent clonal malignant counterparts to normal immunoglobulin secreting cells, each clone producing a single molecular species of normal immunoglobulins. The studies of human myeloma by the use of clonal immunoglobulin markers have clearly demonstrated the presence of B lymphocytes belonging to the malignant clone in the bone marrow of all cases and in the blood of some patients with active disease. Clonality has been defined from the pre-B cell level by the use of antiidiotypic antisera in some studies. These observations may suggest the recruitment of malignant B cells from malignant precursor B lymphocytes. Experimental support for proliferation within the monoclonal B cell compartment gives further evidence for this notion. A similar B cell clonality has been described in murine plasmacytoma.
- Published
- 1984
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. IFN-gamma is not the only mediator of suppressed myelopoiesis produced by mononuclear cells from aplastic anemia patients
- Author
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Laskay T, Hansson M, Anna Porwit, Björkholm M, Berthold W, and Kiessling R
- Subjects
Adult ,Interferon-gamma ,Species Specificity ,Bone Marrow ,Lectins ,Suppressor Factors, Immunologic ,Anemia, Aplastic ,Humans ,Monocytes ,Hematopoiesis - Abstract
Peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) from patients with aplastic anemia (AA) and healthy donors were compared with regard to their ability to produce soluble factors with inhibitory activity on in vitro granulopoiesis (GM-CFC). Although PBMC from AA patients produced enhanced levels of IFN-gamma as compared to controls, this lymphokine was found not to be the main inhibitor of in vitro granulopoiesis. Other, non-IFN related factors were potent inhibitors of both the mature and the immature precursors for GM-CFC, could act across the species barrier and were of low molecular weight. Also PBMC from healthy donors produced a non-IFN mediated GM-CFC inhibitory factor, but to a lesser degree and acting only on one type of myeloid precursors. The possible implications of these findings in relation to the etiology of AA will be discussed.
19. Epstein-Barr virus can infect B-chronic lymphocytic leukemia cells but it does not orchestrate the cell cycle regulatory proteins
- Author
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Maeda A, Bandobashi K, Nagy N, Teramoto N, Péter Gogolák, Pokrovskaja K, Székely L, Björkholm M, Klein G, and Klein E
- Subjects
B-Lymphocytes ,Herpesvirus 4, Human ,Tumor Suppressor Proteins ,Cell Cycle Proteins ,Leukemia, Lymphocytic, Chronic, B-Cell ,Retinoblastoma Protein ,Proto-Oncogene Proteins c-myc ,Viral Proteins ,Epstein-Barr Virus Nuclear Antigens ,Cyclins ,Tumor Cells, Cultured ,Animals ,Cyclin D2 ,Humans ,Cyclin D3 ,Phosphorylation ,Cells, Cultured ,Cyclin-Dependent Kinase Inhibitor p27 - Abstract
To understand the mechanism for the refractoriness of B-chronic lymphocytic leukemia (B-CLL) cells for Epstein-Barr virus (EBV)-induced immortalization.Cultures were initiated with EBV-infected tonsillar B and B-CLL cells. Expression of EBNA-2 and some of the key players regulating G1/S phase transition such as c-myc expression, phosphorylation of Rb protein, expression of G1 cyclins, and the cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor p27 were followed.In line with earlier studies, EBV infection induced c-myc expression, pRb phosphorylation, D2 and D3 expression, and disappearance of p27 in normal B cells. In contrast, EBV-infected B-CLL cells remained resting and they did not express c-myc; cyclin D2, ppRb and cyclin D3 were seen only in occasional cells. Importantly, p27 expression was maintained.In B-CLL cells, the expression of the EBV-encoded nuclear proteins EBNAs is not followed by entrance to the cell cycle. Thus, the difference in the interaction of EBV-normal B cells and EBV-B-CLL cells is already apparent early after infection.
20. Cell-mediated immune reactions in three patients with malignant lymphoproliferative diseases in remission and abnormally high Epstein-Barr virus antibody titers
- Author
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Maria Masucci, Szigeti R, Ernberg I, Björkholm M, Mellstedt H, Henle G, Henle W, Pearson G, Masucci G, Svedmyr E, Johansson B, and Klein G
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Herpesvirus 4, Human ,Immunity, Cellular ,Adolescent ,Antibody-Dependent Cell Cytotoxicity ,Antibodies, Viral ,Hodgkin Disease ,Cell Line ,Leukemia, Lymphoid ,Tumor Virus Infections ,Capsid ,DNA, Viral ,Animals ,Humans ,Female ,Lymphocytes ,Aged - Abstract
Two patients with Hodgkin's disease in remission and one chronic lymphatic leukemia patient with extraordinarily high anti-Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) (viral capsid antigen) antibody titers (greater than 10,000) were selected to study a spectrum of cell-mediated immune responses, including natural killer, interferon-boosted killer, antibody-dependent lymphocytotoxicity, and T-cell-mediated reactions. The purpose was to compare these reactions in patients with immunosuppression and a high EBV load who can hold their EBV-carrying cells under control with the corresponding reactions in patients with EBV-carrying lymphoproliferative disease. In contrast to the latter group, the three patients of the present study showed a less profound and less general suppression of the immune responses. Multiple effector mechanisms probably safeguard against the proliferation of EBV-transformed B-cells. Clinically manifest EBV-carrying lymphoproliferative disease occurs only in very severe immunodeficiencies effecting multiple effectors.
21. Molecular cytogenetic characterization of acute myeloid leukemia and myelodysplastic syndromes with multiple chromosome rearrangements
- Author
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Lindvall C, Nordenskjöld M, Anna Porwit, Björkholm M, and Blennow E
- Subjects
Adult ,Aged, 80 and over ,Male ,Nucleic Acid Hybridization ,Chromosome Breakage ,Middle Aged ,Translocation, Genetic ,Leukemia, Myeloid ,Child, Preschool ,Karyotyping ,Myelodysplastic Syndromes ,Acute Disease ,Cytogenetic Analysis ,Humans ,Female ,Aged - Abstract
Multiple chromosome rearrangements (MCRs) are found in 5-10% of newly diagnosed patients with acute myeloid leukemia (AML) and 15-30% of patients with myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS). However, the initial causes of MCRs and the molecular mechanisms involved are largely unresolved. Nor are the karyotypic patterns well studied, mainly because of the difficulties of obtaining complete karyotypes by G-banding. In this study, we applied spectral karyotyping (SKY) and comparative genomic hybridization (CGH) to investigate further the resulting chromosome imbalances and rearrangements in AML and MDS bone marrow cells with MCRs.Bone marrow cells from 12 AML and 10 MDS patients with MCRs were collected at diagnosis and analyzed by G-banding, SKY and CGH. The patients' characteristics were also collected to pinpoint potential similarities and/or differences between the patients.Our results show that some MCRs seen in AML are similar to MCRs seen in MDS. These MCRs often result in chromosome loss of 5q, 7q and 17p and gain of chromosome 8.The characteristics associated with MRCs include old age, previous exposure to radio- and/or chemotherapy and a short survival time. Probably, these patients should be distinguished from AML patients with primary chromosome rearrangements among other unbalanced chromosome rearrangements. In our experience, SKY and CGH facilitated this process.
22. Combined genetic and transcriptional profiling of acute myeloid leukemia with normal and complex karyotypes
- Author
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Lindvall C, Furge K, Björkholm M, Guo X, Haab B, Blennow E, Magnus Nordenskjöld, and Bt, Teh
23. Splenectomy as a curative treatment for immune thrombocytopenia: A retrospective analysis of 233 patients with a minimum follow up of 10 years
- Author
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Joel Joelsson, Roberto Stasi, Nicola Polverelli, Eva Johansson, Silvia Cantoni, Marco Ruggeri, Michele Baccarani, Nicola Vianelli, Magnus Björkholm, Francesca Palandri, Enrica Morra, Anna Candoni, Francesco Zaja, Francesco Rodeghiero, Angelo Emanuele Catucci, Vianelli N, Palandri F, Polverelli N, Stasi R, Joelsson J, Johansson E, Ruggeri M, Zaja F, Cantoni S, Catucci AE, Candoni A, Morra E, Björkholm M, Baccarani M, Rodeghiero F, Vianelli, N, Palandri, F, Polverelli, N, Stasi, R, Joelsson, J, Johansson, E, Ruggeri, M, Zaja, Francesco, Cantoni, S, Kolade, S, Candoni, A, Morra, E, Bjorkholm, M, Rodeghiero, F, and Baccarani, M.
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Prognosi ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Splenectomy ,Thrombopoietin mimetics ,Follow-Up Studie ,Young Adult ,Postoperative Complications ,Retrospective Studie ,Retrospective analysis ,Humans ,Medicine ,Young adult ,Child ,Retrospective Studies ,Aged ,Purpura, Thrombocytopenic, Idiopathic ,business.industry ,Incidence (epidemiology) ,Incidence ,Infant ,Retrospective cohort study ,Hematology ,Middle Aged ,Prognosis ,medicine.disease ,Thrombosis ,Immune thrombocytopenia ,Surgery ,Treatment Outcome ,immune thrombocytopenia ,Child, Preschool ,Female ,Postoperative Complication ,Original Articles and Brief Reports ,business ,Follow-Up Studies ,Human - Abstract
Background. The treatment of choice in steroid-resistant ITP is still controversial, due to the recent advent of new drugs (anti-CD20 and thrombopoietin mimetics) which have encouraged a generalized tendency to delay splenectomy. Consequently, the importance to define the efficacy and safety of splenectomy in the long-term is substantial. Patients and Methods. We retrospectively analyzed the data of 233 ITP patients who underwent splenectomy between 1959 and 2001, in 6 different European hematological Institutions and have now a minimum follow-up of 10 years from surgery. Results. Of the 233 patients, 206 (88%) achieved a response (87% complete). Sixty-eight out of 206 (33%) responsive patients relapsed, mostly (75%) within 4 years from first response. In 92 patients (39.5%), further treatment was required after splenectomy, which was effective in 76 cases (83%). In 138 patients (59%) response was maintained, free of any treatment, at last contact. No significant association between baseline characteristics and likelihood of stable response was found. Overall, 73 (31%) and 58 (25%) patients experienced at least one infectious or hemorrhagic complication. A stable response to splenectomy was associated with a lower rate of infectious (p=0.004) and hemorrhages (p
- Published
- 2013
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