1. High-dose cyclophosphamide for mobilization of circulating stem cells in chronic myeloid leukemia
- Author
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Maria Pampinella, Rosanna Scimè, Ignazio Majolino, Stefania Tringali, Vasta S, Alessandra Santoro, and Maria Assunta Marino
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Melphalan ,Adolescent ,Cyclophosphamide ,Neutrophils ,Clone (cell biology) ,Leukocyte Count ,Leukemia, Myelogenous, Chronic, BCR-ABL Positive ,hemic and lymphatic diseases ,Humans ,Medicine ,business.industry ,Macrophages ,Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation ,Myeloid leukemia ,Hematology ,General Medicine ,Hematopoietic Stem Cells ,Regimen ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Immunology ,Blood Component Removal ,Cancer research ,Female ,Circulating Stem Cell ,Bone marrow ,Stem cell ,business ,Granulocytes ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Experimental and clinical data suggest that Ph-negative myeloid progenitor cells are present, albeit suppressed, in the bone marrow of chronic myeloid leukemia (CML) patients. These residual Ph-negative cells might, in certain circumstances, regain their proliferative advantage over the leukemic Ph-positive clone. Treating CML patients with intensive chemotherapy might allow the harvest, in the early phase of recovery, of Ph-negative stem cells to be used as graft after myeloablative regimen. In our study, 6 CML patients were admitted to a program of autograft with circulating stem cells (CSC) collected after high-dose (5 or 7 g/m2) cyclophosphamide (HD-CY) mobilization. All were autografted, using busulphan 16 mg/kg and melphalan 60 mg/m2. As graft, 4 patients received CSC only, while 2 patients were also given bone marrow, as their peripheral blood CFU-GM yield was unsatisfactory. Two previously alpha-IFN-responding patients showed a slow hematologic recovery, but achieved a marked and further reduction of their Ph-positive metaphases post-graft. Moreover, in one of them, cytogenetic analyses performed on apheresis product showed a more pronounced reduction of his Ph-positive metaphases, as compared to bone marrow samples, suggesting a potential purging effect of the mobilization procedure.
- Published
- 2009