95 results on '"Jeane P. Hester"'
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2. Cohn de Laval Award Lectureship: The Science Behind the Success Development of a Continuous Flow Blood Cell Separator
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Jeane P. Hester and Gail Rock
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Cobe spectra ,Continuous flow ,Developmental Therapeutics ,Nomination ,Hematology ,Sociology ,IBM ,IBM 2997 ,Management - Abstract
On behalf of Dr. Jeane Hester, I would like to thank everyone in the American Apheresis Society and World Apheresis Society involved with the nomination and presentation of this award. She is truly honored by the recognition of her peers and wishes that she could be here to thank each and every one in person. The reason I am standing here goes back 43 years to July of 1971 when a new ‘crop’ of oncology fellows came to MD Anderson Cancer Center and the Department of Developmental Therapeutics. The chairmen of the department were Emil Frei and Emil J Frereich, with Ken McCredie as the head of the then fledgling apheresis center and I was the tech working in Ken’s research lab. Back then it was somewhat rare to have a female physician in the mix, so word traveled quickly about the tall attractive ‘fellow’ who was winning everyone over with her personality, commitment to her profession and, above all, dedication to her patients. As a fellow, part of the responsibility was to choose a research project and work in the lab in their free time. Several months later this here-to-for phantom Dr. Hester appeared in my lab to discuss where she could work on her project regarding Leukoagglutins in Transfusion. So we began sharing the lab, I used it during the day and she used it at night and occasionally we shared! To paraphrase the last line from Casablanca as Bogart and Claude Rains walk into the night: “This was the beginning of a beautiful friendship”. From that time forward, we worked together on many projects until her retirement from MD Anderson in 1995. The most notable achievement was the development of the first blood cell separators to use disposable channels and all the associated outcomes – the calcium citrate binding incorporated into the software, calcium replacement therapy used during collection, bag parameters for the storage and cryopreservation of cells and optimization of the software for the various procedures. The initial development was accomplished through collaboration with the Biomedical Division of IBM and moving forward she collaborated with GAMBRO COBE and until her 2nd retirement this year with TerumoBCT. The very first 2997 manufactured was called the ‘Genie’ and was donated to Dr. Hester’s Apheresis Unit. It was marketed as the IBM 2997, followed by the next generation – the COBE Spectra. Fast forward 30 years and today, this same blood cell separator is the work horse of apheresis, performing stem cell collections, plasma depletions, plateletpheresis, WBC reductions, and RBC depletions. Like all of us, the Spectra will be retired to make room for a newer model, but the scientific principals established during the development of the continuous flow separators (2990 – 2997 – Spectra) serve as the foundation for the future in apheresis. On a personal note, this award has been a time-traveling experience for Jeane and me. We are back 30+ years where she is drafting the speech and I am preparing the slides of our data. Only back then, it was truly hand-produced 35 mm slides and at least now I have the modern technology of PowerPoint. However, several of the slides and photos presented are digitized from the original 35 mm slide. The speech I will be giving has been written by Dr. Hester as if she were here presenting it herself. Many of you who know her will be able to pick up on several of the ‘mantras’ that she often presented and challenged at meetings, such as. . .‘Showme the data’. She is fiercely protective and loving, steadfast when right and can be stubbornly tenacious and I am proud to call her mentor and friend. – April G. Durett, MSc, Manager, Flow Cytometry Facility, Center for Cell & Gene Therapy I will now channel Dr. Hester in Houston, TX, and present her talk. International Forum: from the WAA Congress in San Francisco, 2014. * Corresponding author. Canadian Apheresis Group. E-mail address: cag@cagcanada.ca (G. Rock).
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- 2015
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3. A Clinical Role for Peripheral Blood Lymphocyte Infusions and Perspectives on Collection
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Jeane P. Hester
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Male ,T cell ,Graft vs Host Disease ,Apoptosis ,Graft vs Leukemia Effect ,Risk Assessment ,Severity of Illness Index ,Peripheral blood mononuclear cell ,Leukemia, Myelogenous, Chronic, BCR-ABL Positive ,Humans ,Transplantation, Homologous ,Medicine ,Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic ,Retrospective Studies ,Immunity, Cellular ,business.industry ,Incidence ,Myeloid leukemia ,Hematology ,Prognosis ,medicine.disease ,Survival Analysis ,Tissue Donors ,Clinical trial ,Treatment Outcome ,surgical procedures, operative ,Graft-versus-host disease ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Nephrology ,Lymphocyte Transfusion ,Molecular Response ,Peripheral blood lymphocyte ,Toxicity ,Immunology ,Female ,business - Abstract
Molecular remissions were observed in some relapsed post allogeneic transplant chronic myeloid leukemia (CML) patients who received donor peripheral blood lymphocyte infusions (DLI). This was indirect evidence of immune-mediated tumor cell killing, and the process was termed graft-versus-leukemia (GVL). Mechanisms were hypothesized to be direct T cell mediated cell lysis or augmented programmed cell death. These observations formed the basis for exploring the role of DLI first in relapsed allogeneic transplant patients with other hematologic malignancies, then as prophylaxis for patients at high risk for relapse and then as adjunctive therapy for transplant strategies utilizing non-myeloablative conditioning regimens. Multiple clinical trials are underway to define dose, schedule, clinical and molecular response and laboratory assays to distinguish lymphocyte subsets mediating GVL and those responsible for graft-versus-host disease (GVHD) toxicity. This review outlines some of the donor/patient and therapy variables involved and some principles of mononuclear cell collection for cellular immunotherapy.
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- 2003
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4. Peripheral blood stem cell collection: the interaction of technology, procedure, and biological factors
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Jeane P. Hester
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medicine.medical_treatment ,Immunology ,CD34 ,Priming (immunology) ,Antigens, CD34 ,Antineoplastic Agents ,Centrifugation ,Pilot Projects ,Blood volume ,Pharmacology ,Granulocyte Colony-Stimulating Factor ,Humans ,Medicine ,Platelet ,Leukapheresis ,Chemotherapy ,business.industry ,Hematology ,Hematopoietic Stem Cells ,Hematopoietic Stem Cell Mobilization ,Blood Cell Count ,Regimen ,Toxicity ,business ,Algorithms - Abstract
Centrifugal technology, continuous flow and discontinuous flow, has served as the technology platform for extracting cell concentrates of interest from peripheral blood (PB) for patient therapy for the past 35–40 yr. Models for procedure outcome exist for collection of normal donor (ND) platelet and granulocyte concentrates that integrate: (1) biological variables (pre-procedure PB cell concentration, the total circulating quantity of cells, donor/patient blood volume (BV)), (2) device efficiency, and (3) procedure parameters such as total blood processed (TBP), and in the case of cytoreductions – the volume collected. (cf. Hester J, Kellogg R, Mulzet A, et al., Blood (54) (1979) 254; Hester J, Ventura G, J Clin Apheresis (4) (1988) 188.) To date, no predictive CD34+ yield algorithm integrating these three variables has been formulated that could be applied prospectively for individual ND or patients (PT). There are economic, toxicity and statistical comparison benefits to be derived from generating such an algorithm. A small pilot study is presented with a brief review of current publications that suggest the circulating quantity of CD34+ cells available to be collected and the quantity mobilized during leukapheresis are the major contributing factors to CD34+ yield, somewhat obscuring the role of the total blood processed (TBP). Intraprocedure CD34+ cell mobilization, incompletely characterized to date, appears to be a dynamic nonlinear process, as the harvested yield does not rise proportionally as the fraction of BV processed increases. And, like the pre-procedure PB CD34+ concentration and total circulating quantity, CD34+ mobilization during leukapheresis probably relates to prior treatment and the priming regimen. Studies that provide: (1) separate analyses of PT populations divided according to chemotherapy toxicity factors; (2) design and implementation of optimal priming regimens with respect to dose ‘intensity’ of both growth factors and chemotherapy; and (3) standardization of laboratory assays of CD34+ enumeration seem essential to generating a predictive algorithm.
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- 2000
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5. Principles of Blood Separation and Component Extraction in a Disposable Continuous‐Flow Single‐Stage Channel
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Alfred Paul Mulzet, Victor R. Kruger, Kenneth B. McCredie, Emil J Freireich, Robert Melroy Kellogg, and Jeane P. Hester
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Centrifuge ,Axial compressor ,Continuous flow ,Computer science ,Single stage ,business.industry ,Blood separation ,Separator (oil production) ,General Medicine ,IBM ,business ,Computer hardware ,IBM 2997 - Abstract
Guest Editor's Introduction: By 1977, the NCI/IBM 2990 and the Amico Celltrifuge, a conceptually similar instrument that had an identical centrifuge bowl, were being used worldwide. However, a major technical problem remained in that the blood path was still not completely disposable. To overcome this drawback, IBM 2977 was developed. The centrifuge bowl was changed from an axial flow separator to a circumferential flow geometry. The IBM 2997 single-stage channel instrument was first introduced and followed by the dual-stage channel instrument to obtain platelet concentrate with minimum lymphocyte contamination. This paper describes the basic design, operation conditions, and collection performance of the single-stage channel IBM 2977. This paper was printed in Blood, vol 54, page 254–268 (1979) and reprinted here with permission. A single-stage disposable channel and seal that provides for leukocyte and granulocyte collection by continuous-flow cell separation (CFCS) has been designed by the IBM Corporation. This paper describes (1) the separation characteristics of whole blood as it responds to varying gravitational (G) forces and flow rates through the channel; (2) the mechanism by which the buffy coat accumulates and is extracted; (3) the efficiency of extraction; (4) those donor and procedural variables that contribute to the final yield; (5) posttransfusion increment response in patients; and (6) the functional integrity of the cells collected.
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- 2000
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6. Identification of megakaryocyte precursors in peripheral blood stem cell collections from normal donors
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Richard E. Champlin, Farzaneh Maadani, A. Durett, Peter Bojko, Jeane P. Hester, and Martin Korbling
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medicine.diagnostic_test ,Platelet Engraftment ,CD34 ,Blood volume ,Hematology ,General Medicine ,Biology ,Flow cytometry ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Megakaryocyte ,Immunology ,medicine ,Platelet ,Bone marrow ,Stem cell - Abstract
Platelet engraftment, the time course and magnitude of platelet recovery (PR) post-transplant, is imprecisely defined but is most often reported as the time to transfusion (tx) independence and/or a platelet count ⩾20,000/μl. While correlations between engraftment time for granulocytes (PMN) and the dose of CD34-positive cells per kilogram are established, such associations have not been established for platelet engraftment. The objective of this study was to quantify subpopulations of CD34-positive cells in peripheral blood stem cell (PBSC) collections of normal, colony-stimulating factor-granulocyte) (G-CSF) primed donors that might represent megakaryocyte (MK) precursors, and to determine whether there is a statistical association between the dose transfused and the time course of the recovery. Based on previously published data of the sequential expression of CD34, HLA-DR, and CD61, among others, during MK maturation, a combination of corresponding antibodies for the detection of various antigen coexpressions by flow cytometry fluorescence-activated cell sorting [FACS] was chosen. CD34-positive cells were further subdivided into CD34++ (bright) and + (dim). Ploidy of density-gradient separated cells was examined in subsequent donor samples by FACS. For the entire group of patients, there was no strong correlation between any of the studied subpopulations and time to PR. Only in a selected groups of patients whose platelet counts showed a sustained increase during the first 6 days after engraftment, there was a weak correlation between the time to PR and the quantity of CD34+/+CD61+ (r = −0.57) and CD34++HLA-DR-CD61+ (r = −0.62) cells infused. The magnitude of platelet production in these pt., a product of the peripheral blood platelet count and the patient's blood volume, was correlated with the time to PR (r = −0.73). We conclude from this study that subpopulations within CD34+ cells are making some contribution to PR in allogeneic peripheral blood stem cell transplantation, but the correlations are not sufficiently strong because there are probably too many unpredictable and unknown variables in the allogeneic setting that influence the pattern of engraftment. J. Clin. Apheresis 13:7–15, 1998. © 1998 Wiley-Liss, Inc.
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- 1998
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7. Treatment of neutropenia-related fungal infections with granulocyte colony-stimulating factor-elicited white blood cell transfusions: a pilot study
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Susan O'Brien, John H. Rex, Elias Anaissie, Hagop M. Kantarjian, Emil J. Freireich, Benjamin Lichtiger, Shahe Vartivarian, M. C. Dignani, Borje S. Andersson, David Jendiroba, and Jeane P. Hester
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Adult ,Male ,Cancer Research ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Antifungal Agents ,Neutropenia ,Adolescent ,Blood Donors ,Pilot Projects ,Gastroenterology ,Amphotericin B ,hemic and lymphatic diseases ,White blood cell ,Internal medicine ,Granulocyte Colony-Stimulating Factor ,medicine ,Humans ,Prospective Studies ,Prospective cohort study ,Mycosis ,Aged ,Leukopenia ,business.industry ,Hematology ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Surgery ,Granulocyte colony-stimulating factor ,Leukocyte Transfusion ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Mycoses ,Oncology ,Female ,medicine.symptom ,Complication ,business ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Neutropenia-related fungal infections can be life-threatening despite antifungal therapy. We evaluated the role of recombinant granulocyte colony-stimulating factor (rG-CSF)-elicited white blood cell (WBC) transfusions in patients with neutropenia-related fungal infections. Adult patients with hematologic malignancies, absolute neutrophil counts (ANC)
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- 1997
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8. Results of MDR-1 vector modification trial indicate that granulocyte/macrophage colony-forming unit cells do not contribute to posttransplant hematopoietic recovery following intensive systemic therapy
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Z. Zu, Ronald J. Berenson, Robert C. Bast, R. E. Giles, Debra Ellerson, Gabriel N. Hortobagyi, Peter F. Thall, Michael Andreeff, D. Seong, R. E. Bird, Richard E. Champlin, Tong Wang, Creighton L. Edwards, John J. Kavanagh, Jeane P. Hester, Shelly Heimfeld, Martin Korbling, T. Holzmayer, Y. Su, A. Chang, Barbara Burtness, Richard J. Cote, E. G. Hanania, Andrzej P. Kudelka, Carlos Bachier, Frankie A. Holmes, Eugene Mechetner, Z. Rahman, Su Chun Cheng, J. M. Ostrove, David F. Claxton, and Albert B. Deisseroth
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Stromal cell ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Breast Neoplasms ,Hematopoietic stem cell transplantation ,Biology ,Polymerase Chain Reaction ,Viral vector ,Colony-Forming Units Assay ,Bone Marrow ,Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols ,medicine ,Humans ,ATP Binding Cassette Transporter, Subfamily B, Member 1 ,Cyclophosphamide ,Bone Marrow Transplantation ,DNA Primers ,Etoposide ,Ovarian Neoplasms ,Multidisciplinary ,Base Sequence ,Hematopoietic Tissue ,Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation ,Genetic Therapy ,Biological Sciences ,Hematopoietic Stem Cells ,Granulocyte-Macrophage Colony Forming Unit ,Molecular biology ,Transplantation ,Haematopoiesis ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Female ,Bone marrow - Abstract
To formally test the hypothesis that the granulocyte/macrophage colony-forming unit (GM-CFU) cells can contribute to early hematopoietic reconstitution immediately after transplant, the frequency of genetically modified GM-CFU after retroviral vector transduction was measured by a quantitative in situ polymerase chain reaction (PCR), which is specific for the multidrug resistance-1 (MDR-1) vector, and by a quantitative GM-CFU methylcellulose plating assay. The results of this analysis showed no difference between the transduction frequency in the products of two different transduction protocols: “suspension transduction” and “stromal growth factor transduction.” However, when an analysis of the frequency of cells positive for the retroviral MDR-1 vector posttransplantation was carried out, 0 of 10 patients transplanted with cells transduced by the suspension method were positive for the vector MDR-1 posttransplant, whereas 5 of 8 patients transplanted with the cells transduced by the stromal growth factor method were positive for the MDR-1 vector transcription unit by in situ or in solution PCR assay (a difference that is significant at the P = 0.0065 level by the Fisher exact test). These data suggest that only very small subsets of the GM-CFU fraction of myeloid cells, if any, contribute to the repopulation of the hematopoietic tissues that occurs following intensive systemic therapy and transplantation of autologous hematopoietic cells.
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- 1996
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9. Photopheresis therapy for cutaneous T-cell lymphoma
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Noreen A. Lemak, Madeleine Duvic, and Jeane P. Hester
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Skin Neoplasms ,Ultraviolet Rays ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Erythroderma ,Dermatology ,Radiation Dosage ,Gastroenterology ,Mycosis Fungoides ,Photopheresis ,Internal medicine ,Advanced disease ,medicine ,Humans ,Sezary Syndrome ,Aged ,Aged, 80 and over ,business.industry ,Remission Induction ,Cutaneous T-cell lymphoma ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Peripheral T-cell lymphoma ,Lymphoma, T-Cell, Cutaneous ,Surgery ,Peripheral ,Lymphoma ,Survival Rate ,Methoxsalen ,Combined therapy ,Female ,Neoplasm Recurrence, Local ,business ,Dermatitis, Exfoliative ,Follow-Up Studies ,Forecasting - Abstract
Background: Cutaneous T-cell lymphoma is a chronic peripheral lymphoma in which aggressive combined therapy elicits high response rates but does not improve survival. Photopheresis therapy has reportedly induced remissions and prolonged survival in patients with advanced disease. Objective: We studied all patients who began photopheresis treatment between February 1988 and July 1994 to determine whether we could confirm the remission rates of previous studies, to evaluate variables that might predict a response, and to discover whether an accelerated delivery system would improve the remission rate or response time. Methods: After an oral dose of methoxalen was administered, a leukocyte-enhanced quantity of blood was exposed to UVA radiation for 1.5 hours and returned to the patient. With our accelerated system, 6 × 10 9 cells were irradiated in nine cycles. Treatments were given on 2 consecutive days once a month. Results: Among 34 patients whose results could be evaluated, the overall response rate (complete and partial remissions) was 50%; most patients had mild side effects. All responders except one had erythroderma. Responders had a decrease of 75% in mean skin scores, whereas nonresponders had an increase of 21%. Conclusion: Photopheresis appears to be effective for selected patients with erythrodermic cutaneous T-cell lymphoma, although we did not achieve as high a remission rate as previously reported by others.
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- 1996
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10. CD8-depleted donor lymphocyte infusion as treatment for relapsed chronic myelogenous leukemia after allogeneic bone marrow transplantation
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James Gajewski, Rakesh Mehra, Donna Przepiorka, Richard E. Champlin, Jeane P. Hester, Issa F. Khouri, Albert B. Deisseroth, Moshe Talpaz, Gabriela Rondon, Martin Korbling, Sergio Giralt, Yang O. Huh, Cheryl F Hirsch-Ginsberg, Hagop M. Kantarjian, D. Seong, M. S. Lee, K. Van Besien, and H. Fischer
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Lymphocyte Transfusion ,business.industry ,Lymphocyte ,Immunology ,Cell Biology ,Hematology ,medicine.disease ,Biochemistry ,Donor lymphocyte infusion ,Transplantation ,Leukemia ,Myelogenous ,surgical procedures, operative ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,hemic and lymphatic diseases ,medicine ,Bone marrow ,business ,Chronic myelogenous leukemia - Abstract
Donor lymphocyte infusions can reinduce complete remission in the majority of patients with chronic myelogenous leukemia (CML) who relapse into chronic phase after allogeneic bone marrow transplantation (BMT). Such infusions are associated with a high incidence of graft- versus-host disease (GVHD) and marrow aplasia. BMT using selective depletion of CD8+ lymphocytes from donor cells reduces the incidence of GVHD without an increase in leukemia relapse. We hypothesized that infusion of CD8-depleted donor peripheral blood lymphocytes could also reinduce complete remissions with a lesser potential to produce symptomatic GVHD in patients with CML who relapsed after allogeneic BMT. Ten patients with Ph(+) CML who relapsed a median of 353 days after BMT (range, 82 to 1,096 days) received donor lymphocyte infusions depleted of CD8+ cells. Nine patients received a single infusion and 1 received two infusions. Four patients were treated while in chronic phase with clonal evolution, 2 during accelerated phase, 3 during blast crisis, and 1 in a cytogenetic relapse. A mean of 0.9 +/- 0.3 x 10(8) mononuclear cells/kg were infused, containing 0.6 +/- 0.4 x 10(6) CD3+CD8+ cells/kg. Six patients achieved hematologic and cytogenetic remission at 4, 8, 11, 15, 39, and 54 weeks after lymphocyte infusion. Two patients developed > or = grade II acute GVHD, and 1 patient developed mild chronic GVHD. We conclude that donor lymphocyte infusions depleted of CD8+ cells can induce remissions with a low rate of severe acute GVHD in patients with CML who relapse after allogeneic BMT, supporting the hypothesis that CD8+ lymphocytes are important effectors of GVHD, but may not be essential for the graft-versus- leukemia effect against this disease. Further controlled studies are required to confirm these preliminary observations.
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- 1995
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11. Principles of Bone Marrow Processing and Progenitor Cell/Mononuclear Cell Concentrate Collection in a Continuous Flow Blood Cell Separation System
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Richard E. Champlin, Gabriela Rondon, Yang O. Huh, M. J. Lauppe, Jeane P. Hester, and Albert B. Deisseroth
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Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Lymphoma ,Immunology ,Population ,Antigens, CD34 ,Bone Marrow Cells ,Transplantation, Autologous ,Peripheral blood mononuclear cell ,Monocytes ,Immunophenotyping ,Blood cell ,Separation system ,Antigens, CD ,Bone Marrow ,Neoplasms ,Humans ,Transplantation, Homologous ,Medicine ,Progenitor cell ,education ,Bone Marrow Transplantation ,education.field_of_study ,Leukemia ,business.industry ,Continuous flow ,Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation ,Hematology ,Hematopoietic Stem Cells ,Apheresis ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Blood Component Removal ,Regression Analysis ,Female ,Bone marrow ,business - Abstract
The application of continuous flow apheresis technology to processing bone marrow for collection of the mononuclear progenitor cell population appears to follow the same principles as collection of mononuclear cells from peripheral blood. Unlike peripheral blood, however, where mobilization of cells from extravascular sites during the procedures contributes significantly to the final cell yield, the entire quantity of progenitor cells available for recovery from marrow is present in the original marrow when it is pooled. The process then becomes one of attempting optimal recovery of the cells of interest while excluding contaminating erythrocytes and cells of the myeloid series. This study reports the development of a protocol for recovery of MNC, CD33+, CD34+, and CD34+/DR- cells from harvested marrow for autologous and allogeneic transplants using a continuous flow blood cell separator, the variables influencing the recovery of the cells of interest and the clinical response to infusion of the processed cells.
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- 1995
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12. Collection and transfusion of granulocyte concentrates from donors primed with granulocyte stimulating factor and response of myelosuppressed patients with established infection
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Elias Anaissie, Hagop M. Kantarjian, Jeane P. Hester, Susan O'Brien, Emil J. Freireich, and M. C. Dignani
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Male ,Neutropenia ,Blood Component Transfusion ,Blood Donors ,Granulocyte ,Leukocyte Count ,Blood product ,Granulocyte Colony-Stimulating Factor ,Humans ,Medicine ,Leukocytosis ,Bone Marrow Diseases ,Blood Specimen Collection ,Leukopenia ,business.industry ,Granulocytosis ,Hematology ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Granulocyte colony-stimulating factor ,Treatment Outcome ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Mycoses ,Immunology ,Female ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Granulocytes - Abstract
Fifteen patients with prolonged neutropenia (a median of 23 days with granulocyte [PMN] < or = 500/microliters) and established fungal infections that had not responded to adequate antifungal therapy were transfused with PMN concentrates collected from 35 cytokine-primed granulocyte colony-stimulating factor (GCSF) donors. Patients received a median of six transfusions. Leukocytosis and granulocytosis were observed within 24 hours of the first GCSF injection, which yielded concentrates averaging 55 x 10(9) white blood cells and 41 x 10(9) PMN. Data analysis suggested that response might be related to the duration of neutropenia and known infection, as patients given PMN tx earlier in the infectious course tended to have a better response. No significant toxicity was observed in donors.
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- 1995
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13. Quantitive Expression of Proliferating Cell Nuclear Antigen by Western Blot (PCNAWB) in Peripheral Blasts Correlates with Remission Induciton in Patients with Acute Myelogenous Leukemia
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Mafalda Megumi Yoshinaga Novaes, Johannes Drach, Steven M. Kornblau, Rainer Khetan, Jeane P. Hester, Pedro Enrique Dorlhiac-Llacer, Naim Sawaya, Michael Andreeff, Albert B. Deisseroth, Auro del Giglio, Dalton F. A. Chamone, and Shreyaskumar Patel
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Adult ,Male ,Cancer Research ,DNA repair ,Blotting, Western ,Cell ,Biology ,Western blot ,Proliferating Cell Nuclear Antigen ,medicine ,Humans ,Nuclear protein ,Aged ,Proportional Hazards Models ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Cell Cycle ,Remission Induction ,Nuclear Proteins ,Hematology ,Middle Aged ,Cell cycle ,medicine.disease ,Molecular biology ,Neoplasm Proteins ,Proliferating cell nuclear antigen ,Blot ,Leukemia, Myeloid, Acute ,Leukemia ,Ki-67 Antigen ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Oncology ,biology.protein ,Female - Abstract
Proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA) is a 36-kD nuclear protein that functions as a cofactor of delta DNA polymerase which is regulated in a cell cycle-dependent fashion. PCNA expression also increases when cells are actively engaged in DNA repair. We used Western blotting (WB) to measure the level of expression of PCNA in peripheral blasts of 36 adult acute myelogenous leukemia (AML) patients treated with Ara-C based induction regimens. PCNA levels correlated positively with the percentage of cells in S+G2M of the cell cycle. Logistic regression analysis revealed PCNA (beta = 4.5162; p = 0.0260) together with age (beta = 0.1777; p = 0.0364) as independent variables for remission induction: high PCNA levels were associated with poor response to induction therapy. PCNA expression was not, however, a predictor of survival in this subset of patients. We conclude that PCNA levels in this disease may be important for predicting response to Ara-C based remission induction chemotherapy.
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- 1995
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14. Early myeloablative therapy for multiple myeloma
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Richard E. Champlin, Jeane P. Hester, Kay Delasalle, Raymond Alexanian, and Meletios A. Dimopoulos
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Oncology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Intensive treatment ,Immunology ,Cell Biology ,Hematology ,Disease ,medicine.disease ,Biochemistry ,Surgery ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Internal medicine ,Immunopathology ,medicine ,In patient ,Bone marrow ,Stem cell ,Progenitor cell ,business ,Multiple myeloma - Abstract
The value of early myeloablative therapy supported by autologous bone marrow or blood progenitor cells was assessed in 72 patients with multiple myeloma who were treated within 1 year of initial therapy. Forty-five patients were consolidated during remission, and 27 patients were treated for primary refractory disease. Outcomes were compared with those of similar patients who did not receive intensive treatment primarily for socioeconomic reasons. Among patients who had responded previously, myeloablative therapy increased the rate of complete remission from 5% to 45% (P < .01) but did not prolong progression-free intervals or survival times. The same treatment controlled the myeloma in 70% of patients with primary resistant disease and prolonged the median survival from 37 to 83 months (P = .03). Intensive treatment for primary resistant myeloma administered later in the disease course resulted in significantly lower response rates and shorter progression- free intervals. Current myeloablative regimens supported by autologous stem cells appeared useful primarily in patients with primary resistant disease during the first year of therapy.
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- 1994
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15. Levels of retinoblastoma protein expression in newly diagnosed acute myelogenous leukemia
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Shi Xue Hu, Miloslav Beran, Terry L. Smith, Elihu H. Estey, Hong Ji Xu, Steven M. Kornblau, Wei Zhang, Jeane P. Hester, William F. Benedict, and Albert B. Deisseroth
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Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Chemotherapy ,biology ,business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Immunology ,Retinoblastoma protein ,Cell Biology ,Hematology ,medicine.disease ,Biochemistry ,Peripheral blood mononuclear cell ,Gastroenterology ,Blot ,Leukemia ,Myelogenous ,Internal medicine ,Gene expression ,medicine ,biology.protein ,Immunohistochemistry ,business - Abstract
The relationship between the level of retinoblastoma protein (RB) expression and the survival of 113 newly diagnosed acute myelogenous leukemia (AML) patients was studied. Western blotting was used to determine the level of RB protein present in peripheral blood leukemia cells and results were confirmed in 26 patients by immunohistochemistry. The leukemic cells from 22/113 AML patients (19%) contained RB protein at levels that were equal to or less than the level of RB observed in the mononuclear cell fraction of peripheral blood from normal individuals (Low RB). Levels of RB greater than that of normal blood (Elevated RB) were seen in 91 patients (81%). The median survival of patients with low RB was significantly shorter than that seen in patients with elevated RB, 12 weeks versus 40 weeks (P = .02). Remission induction frequency was 36% in low RB patients compared with 68% in AML patients with elevated RB (P = .01). Multivariate analysis showed that low RB protein level was an independent prognostic factor predictive or poor survival after allowing for other known prognostic factors. These data suggest that a low level of the RB protein at the time of diagnosis is associated with shortened survival in AML patients because of inferior response to conventional therapy. Monitoring of the RB level could identify a subgroup of AML patients with an extremely poor prognosis when treated with chemotherapy alone, who would be eligible for alternative therapeutic strategies.
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- 1994
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16. Genetic marking shows that Ph+ cells present in autologous transplants of chronic myelogenous leukemia (CML) contribute to relapse after autologous bone marrow in CML
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Debra Ellerson, Karen Janicek, Z. Zu, Joy Hamer, Patricia Tibbits, David F. Claxton, Martin Korbling, April G. Durett, Siqing Fu, Moshe Talpaz, Ronald J. Berenson, Hagop M. Kantarjian, Leslie Calvert, Jeane P. Hester, Shelly Heimfeld, Albert B. Deisseroth, Robert C. Moen, Michael Thomas, Christopher L. Reading, E. G. Hanania, Leah Goldberg, Richard E. Champlin, and W. French Anderson
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Chemotherapy ,Cyclophosphamide ,business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Immunology ,Cell Biology ,Hematology ,Total body irradiation ,medicine.disease ,Biochemistry ,Leukemia ,Haematopoiesis ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,medicine ,Bone marrow ,business ,Ex vivo ,medicine.drug ,Chronic myelogenous leukemia - Abstract
Relapse after autologous bone marrow transplantation for chronic myelogenous leukemia (CML) can be due either to the persistence of leukemia cells in systemic tissues following preparative therapy, or due to the persistence of leukemia cells in the autologous marrow used to restore marrow function after intensive therapy. To help distinguish between these two possible causes of relapse, we used safety-modified retroviruses, which contain the bacterial resistance gene NEO, to mark autologous marrow cells that had been collected from patients early in the phase of hematopoietic recovery after in vivo chemotherapy. The cells were then subjected to ex vivo CD34 selection following collection and 30% of the bone marrow were exposed to a safety-modified virus. This marrow was infused after delivery of systemic therapy, which consisted of total body irradiation (1,020 cGy), cyclophosphamide (120 mg/kg), and VP-16 (750 mg/m2). RT PCR assays specific for the bacterial NEO mRNA, which was coded for by the virus, and the bcr-abl mRNA showed that in two evaluable CML patients transplanted with marked cells, sufficient numbers of leukemia cells remained in the infused marrow to contribute to systemic relapse. In addition, both normal and leukemic cells positive for the retroviral transgenome persisted in the systemic circulation of the patients for at least 280 days posttransplant showing that the infused marrow was responsible for the return of hematopoiesis following the preparative therapy. This observation shows that it is possible to use a replication-incompetent safety-modified retrovirus in order to introduce DNA sequences into the hematopoietic cells of patients undergoing autologous bone marrow transplantation. Moreover, this data suggested that additional fractionation procedures will be necessary to reduce the probability of relapse after bone marrow transplantation in at least the advanced stages of the disease in CML patients undergoing autologous bone marrow transplantation procedures.
- Published
- 1994
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17. Detection of fusion transcripts generated by the inversion 16 chromosome in acute myelogenous leukemia
- Author
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Albert B. Deisseroth, Paula Marlton, H. B. Hsu, Pengfei Liu, Janet D. Rowley, Frank H. Collins, David F. Claxton, Michael J. Siciliano, and Jeane P. Hester
- Subjects
Genetics ,Immunology ,Breakpoint ,Cell Biology ,Hematology ,Biology ,Biochemistry ,Molecular biology ,Myelogenous ,Chromosome 16 ,Complementary DNA ,MYH11 ,Coding region ,Gene ,Chromosomal inversion - Abstract
Pericentric inversion of chromosome 16 [inv(16)(p13q22)] and the related t(16;16)(p13;q22) are seen in a subset of acute myelogenous leukemia (AML) phenotypically and prognostically differing from other cases. We have recently shown that inv(16) results in fusion of CBFB/PEBP2B, a gene encoded at 16q22 to MYH11, a smooth muscle myosin heavy chain gene encoded at 16p13. Chimeric transcripts consisting of upstream CBFB fused to downstream MYH11 coding sequences result from this fusion. In this study we have examined a series of 37 of these cases using reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) to detect expression of a hybrid CBFB/MYH11 transcript. Chimeric cDNAs were detected in all but 1 of 37 leukemias with typical inv(16) or t(16;16). Such chimeric products were not seen in a case with inv(16)(p13q24) (ie, a variant q arm breakpoint) or any of 10 cases of AML without these chromosomal changes. Four different chimeric transcripts were found, representing differing fusion points within MYH11 spliced to position 495 of CBFB. Primer sets are described for efficient amplification of these different cDNA forms. Amplification of cDNA showed that all but 17 codons of the CBFB coding sequence are included in the abnormal transcripts. RT-PCR was shown to be highly sensitive and potentially useful for detection of leukemic cells during morphologic remission.
- Published
- 1994
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18. Intensive Sequential Therapy for VAD-Resistant Multiple Myeloma
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Meletios A. Dimopoulos, Raymond Alexanian, Jeane P. Hester, Donna M. Weber, Kay Delasalle, and Richard E. Champlin
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Cancer Research ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Cyclophosphamide ,Drug Resistance ,Gastroenterology ,Dexamethasone ,Drug Administration Schedule ,Internal medicine ,Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols ,medicine ,Humans ,Multiple myeloma ,Etoposide ,Aged ,Bone Marrow Transplantation ,business.industry ,Beta-2 microglobulin ,Mortality rate ,Bone Marrow Purging ,Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation ,Granulocyte-Macrophage Colony-Stimulating Factor ,Hematology ,Middle Aged ,Prognosis ,medicine.disease ,Autologous bone ,Combined Modality Therapy ,Surgery ,Oncology ,Doxorubicin ,Vincristine ,Female ,Stem cell ,Multiple Myeloma ,business ,Median survival ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Few effective regimens are available for patients with advanced multiple myeloma resistant to alkylating agents and VAD. We treated 65 patients with advanced and refractory multiple myeloma with the combination of cyclophosphamide (3.0 gm/m2) and etoposide (900 mg/m2) followed by GM-CSF at a daily dose of 0.125 mg/m2. Thirty-five percent of patients responded with a 6% mortality rate. After a median of 2 months, 16 patients received myeloablative treatment supported by autologous bone marrow or blood stem cells. Four of ten previously resistant patients responded so that the overall response rate was 42%. The median survival for all patients was 10 months and the median remission was 8 months. The median survival for patients with both low serum lactate dehydrogenase and B2 microglobulin, or for those who received myeloablative treatment, was projected at 18 months. Our combination of cyclophosphamide and etoposide provided an effective rescue treatment for many patients with advanced multiple myeloma resistant to conventional therapies. This program allowed early blood stem cell collection in support of subsequent myeloablative therapy for selected patients.
- Published
- 1994
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19. Thiotepa, busulfan, and cyclophosphamide: a new preparative regimen for autologous marrow or blood stem cell transplantation in high-risk multiple myeloma
- Author
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Meletios A. Dimopoulos, Raymond Alexanian, K. Van Besien, Borje S. Andersson, Rakesh Mehra, Kay Delasalle, Sergio Giralt, Jeane P. Hester, Donna Przepiorka, and Christopher L. Reading
- Subjects
Chemotherapy ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Cyclophosphamide ,business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Immunology ,Cell Biology ,Hematology ,ThioTEPA ,medicine.disease ,Biochemistry ,Gastroenterology ,Surgery ,Transplantation ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Bone marrow ,business ,Busulfan ,Multiple myeloma ,medicine.drug ,Preparative Regimen - Abstract
Forty patients with multiple myeloma received thiotepa (750 mg/m2), busulfan (10 mg/kg), and cyclophosphamide (120 mg/kg) (TBC) followed by autologous bone marrow or blood stem cell support. Granulocyte-Colony stimulating factor (G-CSF) was administered to accelerate hematopoietic recovery. Sixty-five percent of all patients responded to this treatment. Eighty-eight percent of patients transplanted in partial remission had a further reduction of the myeloma and 53% achieved a complete remission. Forty-eight percent of patients with refractory myeloma responded. All responding patients transplanted during partial remission or with primary refractory myeloma remain free of progression for a period of 4 to 24 months post-transplant, but the remission duration of patients treated in refractory relapse was short (4 months). Five of 24 patients transplanted with marrow and none of 16 receiving blood stem cells died of treatment-related complications. Use of blood stem cells resulted in more rapid granulocyte and platelet recovery. We conclude that TBC is an effective, relatively well tolerated, preparative regimen for patients with multiple myeloma.
- Published
- 1993
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20. Plasma exchange: A potential role in promyelocytic leukemia—disseminated intravascular coagulopathy
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Jeane P. Hester
- Subjects
Hematologic Tests ,Plasma Exchange ,business.industry ,Immunology ,Hemorrhage ,Hematology ,Disseminated Intravascular Coagulation ,medicine.disease ,Leukemia ,Treatment Outcome ,Leukemia, Promyelocytic, Acute ,Risk Factors ,medicine ,Coagulopathy ,Cancer research ,Humans ,business - Published
- 1993
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21. Quality assurance in hemapheresis granulocyte transfusions: Current need and quality assurance
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Jeane P. Hester
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Immunology ,Hematology ,Neutropenic infection ,Current management ,Infected patient ,medicine ,Quality (business) ,Intensive care medicine ,business ,Quality assurance ,media_common - Abstract
It would seem that at least two major issues are relevant to any discussion of the use of granulocyte concentrates for support of the neutropenic infected patient. 1. 1. Quality assurances of the concentrates 2. 2. Is there a role for granulocyte transfusions in current management of neutropenic infection?
- Published
- 1993
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22. A phosphatase activity present in peripheral blood myeloid cells of chronic myelogenous leukemia patients but not normal individuals alters nuclear protein binding to transcriptional enhancers of interferon-inducible genes
- Author
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Jeane P. Hester, O. M. Z. Howard, Moshe Talpaz, Albert B. Deisseroth, Hagop M. Kantarjian, D. Seong, B. Reiter, E. Johnson, and Simon H. Sims
- Subjects
Electrophoresis ,Myeloid ,Transcription, Genetic ,Acid Phosphatase ,Molecular Sequence Data ,Biology ,Myelogenous ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Bone Marrow ,Interferon ,Leukemia, Myelogenous, Chronic, BCR-ABL Positive ,hemic and lymphatic diseases ,medicine ,Humans ,Nuclear protein ,Sodium orthovanadate ,Base Sequence ,Temperature ,Nuclear Proteins ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Gene Expression Regulation, Neoplastic ,Leukemia ,Enhancer Elements, Genetic ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,chemistry ,Interferon Type I ,Cancer research ,Bone marrow ,Research Article ,medicine.drug ,Chronic myelogenous leukemia - Abstract
Cytoplasmic protein from peripheral blood myeloid cells of chronic myelogenous leukemia (CML) patients altered the electrophoretic mobility of complexes formed between nuclear proteins and interferon-inducible transcriptional enhancers. Immature myeloid marrow cells (blasts and promyelocytes) have a higher level of this activity than do mature myeloid marrow cells (bands and polys). This activity, which is not detectable in the peripheral blood cells of normal individuals, is at least 50-fold higher in CML marrow blasts and promyelocytes than that found in marrow blasts and promyelocytes of normal individuals. This activity was inhibited by in vivo incubation of immature myeloid cells with the phosphatase inhibitor, sodium orthovanadate (0.2 mM), and by adding orthovanadate (20 mM) directly to cytoplasmic proteins of myeloid cells. Interferon-alpha (1,000 U/ml) reduced the effects of the CML myeloid cell cytoplasmic protein on the electrophoretic mobility of nuclear protein-DNA complexes. These data suggest that a unique phosphatase may be involved in the abnormalities in CML which are modulated by interferon-alpha.
- Published
- 1990
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23. Effect of Retinoids on the Release and Gene Expression of Tumor Necrosis Factor-α in Human Peripheral Blood Monocytes
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Gabriel Lopez-Berestein, Kapil Mehta, Jeane P. Hester, J. Turpin, and Mark Blick
- Subjects
Lipopolysaccharides ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Lipopolysaccharide ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Immunology ,Retinoic acid ,Gene Expression ,Tretinoin ,Endogeny ,Biology ,Monocytes ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Immunology and Allergy ,RNA, Messenger ,Vitamin A ,Cells, Cultured ,Tumor Necrosis Factor-alpha ,Monocyte ,Biological activity ,Cell Biology ,In vitro ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Cytokine ,Endocrinology ,chemistry ,Tumor necrosis factor alpha - Abstract
The effect of retinoic acid (RA) and retinol (ROH) on the release of tumor necrosis factor (TNF) by human peripheral blood monocytes (HPBM) was determined. HPBM were cultured for various periods of time in either 5% complete (cAB) or delipidized (DLS) AB serum. TNF release (L929 cytolytic assay) in the presence of cAB occurred during the first 3 days of in vitro culture. Delipidization of AB serum completely inhibited the lipopolysaccharide (LPS)-induced release of TNF by HPBM. Addition of RA (0.5 μM) to DLS restored LPS-induced TNF release by HPBM, and supplementation with ROH (1.0 μM) resulted in release of TNF-like activity, but only after 3 days of in vitro culture. The maintenance of TNF release by the addition of exogenous RA after 3 days of in vitro culture suggested that depletion of endogenous RA was partially responsible for loss of TNF-like activity. The levels of endogenous TNF protein and mRNA were not influenced by delipidization of serum and were found to be similar to those of HPBM cultured in the presence of AB serum. TNF protein and mRNA were undetectable in HPBM ROH-treated cell lysates, although cytolytic activity was observed in culture supernatants. These results suggest that retinoids are required for the release of cytolytic factors from HPBM and that non-TNF cytolytic factors may be released by these cells at different stages of maturation.
- Published
- 1990
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24. Interferon affects nuclear proteins in cells of clinically sensitive chronic myelogenous leukemia patients
- Author
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O. M. Z. Howard, Hagop M. Kantarjian, D. Seong, Gabriel Lopez-Berestein, A. Cork, J. Turpin, Jeane P. Hester, N. Paslidis, A. Wedrychowski, and Moshe Talpaz
- Subjects
Gel electrophoresis ,Immunology ,Cell Biology ,Hematology ,Biology ,medicine.disease ,Molecular biology ,Biochemistry ,Myelogenous ,Leukemia ,Cytoplasm ,Interferon ,hemic and lymphatic diseases ,medicine ,Nuclear protein ,Enhancer ,Chronic myelogenous leukemia ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Cytoplasmic protein extracts from chronic myelogenous leukemia (CML) cells contained an activity that altered the electrophoretic mobility of complexes formed between nuclear proteins and the transcriptional enhancers of interferon (IFN)-inducible genes. Exposure of CML cells to IFN-alpha diminished the effect of the CML cytoplasmic proteins on these nuclear protein-DNA complexes. The presence of clinical responsiveness to IFN-alpha correlated with the sensitivity to the IFN- induced change in the electrophoretic mobility of nuclear protein-DNA complexes. These data suggest that the action of IFN-alpha in CML may be linked to a pathway that can result in posttranslational modification of nuclear proteins.
- Published
- 1990
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25. Inhibition of lymphokine-activated killer cell generation by blocking factors in sera of patients with head and neck cancer
- Author
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Jeane P. Hester, Stimson P. Schantz, Samuel P. Bugis, Peter G. Sacks, Howard E. Savage, Eva Lotzová, and Tamas Racz
- Subjects
Cytotoxicity, Immunologic ,Interleukin 2 ,Cancer Research ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Immunology ,Dose-Response Relationship, Immunologic ,chemical and pharmacologic phenomena ,Antigen-Antibody Complex ,Pharmacology ,Immune system ,Suppressor Factors, Immunologic ,Humans ,Immunology and Allergy ,Medicine ,Killer Cells, Lymphokine-Activated ,Cytotoxicity ,Immunity, Cellular ,Lymphokine-activated killer cell ,Dose-Response Relationship, Drug ,Plasma Exchange ,business.industry ,Immunotherapy ,Recombinant Proteins ,Cytolysis ,Oncology ,Head and Neck Neoplasms ,Cell culture ,Carcinoma, Squamous Cell ,Interleukin-2 ,Plasmapheresis ,business ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Cytolytic activation of peripheral blood lymphocytes by recombinant interleukin-2 (rIL-2) in patients with squamous cell carcinoma (SCC) of the head and neck may be inhibited by serum blocking factors, and this could influence therapeutic efficacy. Peripheral blood lymphocytes from 21 patients with this disease and 17 controls were incubated with 10-1000 U rIL-2 for 6 days in supplemented complete medium (containing 10% fetal calf serum) or the same medium plus 10% autologous serum. After washing the effector cells, we determined their cytotoxicity against K562 and MDA1386, a lymphokine-activated-killer(LAK)-sensitive SCC cell line, using a 51Cr-release assay. Patient sera inhibited LAK-generated lysis of both MDA1386 and K562, while control sera from healthy persons inhibited LAK-generated lysis of MDA1386. The blocking activity of patient sera tended to be greater than that of control sera. The sera of patients with untreated or recurrent disease and those who were free of disease had equivalent inhibitory capacity. The serum blocking factor acted in a dose-dependent manner, and inhibition was overcome by increasing the dose of rIL-2. Levels of circulating immune complexes (measured by the C1q binding method) did not correlate significantly with inhibition. A clinical protocol of repeated plasma exchange in patients with advanced and recurrent squamous cell carcinoma of the head and neck allowed sequential study of one patients's serum before, during, and after treatments. Plasmapheresis removed serum inhibitory factors, albeit temporarily. The activity of serum blocking factors in patients with this disease can be modulated by increasing doses of rIL-2 and by plasma exchange. This modulation may be important to improving clinical response rates for patients undergoing immunotherapy.
- Published
- 1990
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26. Long-Term Results of CAP Therapy in Chronic Lymphocytic Leukemia
- Author
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Kenneth B. McCredie, Michael J. Keating, Jeane P. Hester, William K. Murphy, Michael A. Burgess, and Emil J. Freireich
- Subjects
Cancer Research ,Chemotherapy ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Cyclophosphamide ,business.industry ,Cumulative dose ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Chronic lymphocytic leukemia ,Hematology ,medicine.disease ,Gastroenterology ,Regimen ,Leukemia ,Oncology ,Prednisone ,Internal medicine ,Immunology ,Medicine ,business ,Untreated Chronic Lymphocytic Leukemia ,medicine.drug - Abstract
This study was designed to study the efficacy and toxicity of an adriamycin-containing regimen (CAP: cyclophosphamide, adriamycin, and prednisone) in patients with previously untreated chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL). CAP was given to clinical complete remission followed by 18 months of cyclophosphamide-prednisone (CP) maintenance. Forty-seven patients with previously untreated CLL were treated. These patients initially presented with advanced stage (Rai III or IV) or had less advanced stage (Rai 0-II) patients and demonstrated evidence of disease progression. Patients received 750 mg/m(2) of cyclophosphamide intravenously on day 1, 50 mg/m(2) of adriamycin intravenously on day 1 and 100 mg/day of prednisone on days 1-5. Courses were repeated at 3-week intervals until clinical CR, at which time maintenance with cyclophosphamide and prednisone (CP) was commenced. A maximum cumulative dose of 450 mg/m(2) of adriamycin (9 courses of CAP) was given. Twenty (43%) of 47 patients obtained a CR and 11 (23%) obtained a partial remission. Bone marrow biopsy criteria were used to define response in addition to clinical and peripheral blood responses. All patients have been followed for 10 years. The median survival was 259 weeks. No patient remains in remission. No impact of response on survival was found. Surprisingly, the response rate and survival were higher and longer for patients with more advanced stages and higher tumor burdens. The median survival times for patients with Rai stage IV and Binet stage C disease were 93 months and 81 months, respectively. Although the regimen was well tolerated, three patients, each with an antecedent cardiac risk factor, developed congestive heart failure. Adriamycin containing regimens can be safely given to elderly patients with CLL and show promise in the treatment of advanced stage disease.
- Published
- 1990
- Full Text
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27. Circulating Myeloid Progenitor Cell Kinetics during Hematologic Recovery from Chemotherapy and Subsequent Recombinant Human Granulocyte-Macrophage Colony-Stimulating Factor Administration
- Author
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Jeane P. Hester, Christopher L. Reading, Saroj Vadhan-Raj, and G.J. Ventura
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Neutropenia ,Myeloid ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Antineoplastic Agents ,Bone Marrow Cells ,Biology ,Colony-Forming Units Assay ,Bone Marrow ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Progenitor cell ,Cells, Cultured ,Chemotherapy ,Cell Cycle ,Granulocyte-Macrophage Colony-Stimulating Factor ,Sarcoma ,Hematology ,General Medicine ,Hematopoietic Stem Cells ,Recombinant Proteins ,Transplantation ,Haematopoiesis ,Cytokine ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Endocrinology ,Granulocyte macrophage colony-stimulating factor ,Cancer research ,Stem cell ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Hematopoietic recovery from chemotherapy may be associated with an increase in circulating myeloid progenitor cell concentration (CFU-GM); these cells may be harvested by apheresis and used for auto-logous transplantation after high-dose cytoreductive therapy. Not all patients will demonstrate this increase, possibly due to damage to the stem cell compartment from prior chemoradiotherapy. Elevated circulating CFU-GM has also been reported in patients after short-term administration of recombinant human granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (rhGM-CSF); whether elevation would persist during longer duration is unknown. We measured circulating CFU-GM (by both limiting dilution in liquid culture and colony formation in semisolid media) in patients with sarcoma who began infusion of rhGM-CSF during recovery from chemotherapy. Patients with elevated circulating CFU-GM did not sustain these levels during subsequent rhGM-CSF infusion. By contrast, patients without rebound elevation of circulating CFU-GM following chemotherapy recovery did increase CFU-GM levels with rhGM-CSF administration. The proportion of marrow CFU-GM in cell cycle during chemotherapy recovery was elevated in both patient groups and remained elevated with rhGM-CSF administration. Both marrow and peripheral blood limiting dilution assays demonstrated linear growth kinetics, indicating a direct effect of the in vitro growth factor (also rhGM-CSF) on progenitor cells without excessive influence or dependence on accessory cells in culture. The use of rhGM-CSF to restore circulating CFU-GM for apheresis during recovery in patients lacking such elevation merits further study.
- Published
- 1990
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28. Contents, Vol. 84, 1990
- Author
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Jeane P. Hester, Mark J. Melaragno, Mari Nagata, Naoki Sadamori, Bertha A. Bouroncle, Christopher L. Reading, Takahiro Itoyama, Ourania G. Papageorgiou, Takeo Fujimoto, Naoyuki Katano, Dimitris A. Papanastasiou, A.E. Bradshaw, Hideo Nakamura, E. Fonseca, Lee Bairnsfather, A. Takatsuki, Keshava Prasad, Toshiro Hara, Masuko Tagawa, M. Sakaguchi, Y. Koishihara, Saroj Vadhan-Raj, Ruth Y. Wernli, Tammy R. Bordelon, Kanji Sakamoto, Luis Bello López, Seiji Tokunaga, F. Manso, Ronald G. Strauss, Yasunobu Yokoyama, M. Kawakita, Liisa Volin, William L. Marsh, Yoshitoshi Itoh, Keiji Sawada, Kohji Ueda, Karl S. Theil, Takaya Tanaka, Kuniaki Sasaki, G.J. Ventura, Micheal Bowen, Ei-ichi Yao, Ippei Sasagawa, Iris Th. Spiliopoulou, Nicholas G. Beratis, Hideki Kuriki, Kawai S, J. Matsushita, Tapani Ruutu, Isao Nakamura, Toshiaki Kamei, Hiroyuki Shimizu, Delores G. Cordle, Michito Ichimaru, Naoshi Takeyama, K. Shibuya, Tomoyuki Taniguchi, Glenn M. Mills, Robert E. Wolf, Daniel Sedmak, and Bruce A. Baethge
- Subjects
Hematology ,General Medicine - Published
- 1990
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29. Intensive dose ifosfamide and etoposide with G-CSF for stem cell mobilization in patients with non-Hodgkin's lymphoma
- Author
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Adrian P. Gee, P. McLaughlin, M. Korbling, J. G. Gajewski, A. H. Sarris, Richard E. Champlin, Jeane P. Hester, Fredrick B. Hagemeister, K. Van Besien, J. Romaguera, Fernando Cabanillas, Sergio Giralt, Paolo Anderlini, Issa F. Khouri, Borje S. Andersson, A. Durett, M. Donato, Cindy Ippoliti, D. A. Blamble, Anas Younes, Maria A Rodriguez, and J. Lauppe
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Cancer Research ,medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Urology ,Transplantation, Autologous ,Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols ,Granulocyte Colony-Stimulating Factor ,medicine ,Mucositis ,Humans ,Ifosfamide ,Etoposide ,Chemotherapy ,business.industry ,Lymphoma, Non-Hodgkin ,Graft Survival ,Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation ,Induction chemotherapy ,Hematology ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Combined Modality Therapy ,Hematopoietic Stem Cell Mobilization ,Surgery ,Lymphoma ,Non-Hodgkin's lymphoma ,Regimen ,Oncology ,Female ,business ,medicine.drug - Abstract
We studied 36 patients with non-Hodgkin's lymphoma to evaluate the stem cell yield following recovery from intensive dose ifosfamide and etoposide given as mobilization chemotherapy. We also assessed the toxicity of the regimen and engraftment kinetics. All patients had intermediate grade lymphoma and had either failed to achieve a complete remission to induction chemotherapy or had relapsed. Patients received ifosfamide 10 g/m2 IV total dose given over 72 hours, etoposide 150 mg/m2 IV every 12 hours for 6 doses and G-CSF 10 microg/kg/d. Thirty-four patients went on to receive high-dose chemotherapy with BEAM or with CVP and BEAM. A median of 2 (1-10) apheresis was required to reach the target CD34+ count of4 x 10(6)/kg. A median of 13.1 CD34+ cells/kg (4.1-148) was obtained. Toxicity was limited to mucositis in 3 patients, transient confusion and transient rise in liver function tests in 3 and 2 patients respectively. The median time to engraftment was 10 days (8-17) for all the patients undergoing high-dose chemotherapy. The regimen of intensive dose ifosfamide and etoposide along with G-CSF is well tolerated and in this group of patients has lead to successful stem cell harvests and sustained engraftment.
- Published
- 2000
30. Protein A immunoadsorption in alloimmunized patients refractory to platelet transfusions and in patients with treatment-resistant immune thrombocytopoenic purpura
- Author
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P. Kuehnl, A.R Zander, Jeane P. Hester, Kai Gutensohn, and S.D Rowley
- Subjects
Purpura, Thrombocytopenic, Idiopathic ,business.industry ,Immunology ,Hematology ,Platelet Transfusion ,Protein a immunoadsorption ,Purpura ,Immune system ,Treatment Outcome ,Refractory ,Isoantibodies ,medicine ,Humans ,Platelet ,In patient ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Staphylococcal Protein A ,Treatment resistant ,Immunosorbent Techniques - Published
- 1998
31. Splenectomy in the accelerated or blastic phase of chronic myelogenous leukemia: a single-institution, 25-year experience
- Author
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Gildy Babiera, Hagop M. Kantarjian, Paula M. Termuhlen, Raphael E. Pollock, Jeane P. Hester, and Michael Bouvet
- Subjects
Adult ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Splenectomy ,Blastic Phase ,Postoperative Complications ,hemic and lymphatic diseases ,Acute lymphocytic leukemia ,Leukemia, Myelogenous, Chronic, BCR-ABL Positive ,medicine ,Humans ,Platelet ,Blood Transfusion ,Single institution ,Risk factor ,Child ,Aged ,business.industry ,Platelet Count ,Cancer ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Survival Analysis ,Thrombocytopenia ,Surgery ,Female ,business ,Blast Crisis ,Spleen ,Chronic myelogenous leukemia - Abstract
Patients in the accelerated or blastic phases of chronic myelogenous leukemia (CML) often have painful splenomegaly and secondary thrombocytopenia. We tested the hypothesis that splenectomy can be performed with minimal complications in advanced CML, thereby alleviating pain, reversing thrombocytopenia, and minimizing transfusion requirements.We reviewed the records of 53 patients in the accelerated or blastic phases of CML who underwent splenectomy between 1970 and 1995 at the U. T. M. D. Anderson Cancer Center.Twenty-eight patients were in accelerated phase and 25 in blastic phase at the time of splenectomy. The most common indications for splenectomy were symptomatic splenomegaly (median splenic weight, 1000 gm; range, 120 to 6700 gm) or thrombocytopenia (platelet count less than 100,000/microliter) or both. There was 1 death within 30 days of splenectomy. The preoperative platelet count increased 3.72-fold +/- 0.53-fold (mean +/- SEM) by postoperative day 7 (p0.001; paired t test). Patients with transfusion-dependent thrombocytopenia had significantly fewer platelet and red blood cell transfusions in the 6 months after splenectomy than in the 6 months before splenectomy (p = 0.016; sign test).Splenectomy can be performed with minimal morbidity and mortality in advanced CML, thereby relieving symptomatic splenomegaly, reversing thrombocytopenia, and minimizing transfusion requirements.
- Published
- 1997
32. Invasive Aspergillus sinusitis during bone marrow transplantation
- Author
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Elias Anaissie, Koen van Besien, Claire F. Verschraegen, Cecilia Dignani, Jeane P. Hester, and Borje S. Andersson
- Subjects
Microbiology (medical) ,Adult ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Antifungal Agents ,Neutropenia ,Exacerbation ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Myelogenous ,Immunocompromised Host ,Amphotericin B ,medicine ,Aspergillosis ,Humans ,Sinusitis ,Mycosis ,Bone Marrow Transplantation ,General Immunology and Microbiology ,business.industry ,Immunosuppression ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Surgery ,Leukemia ,Leukemia, Myeloid, Acute ,Leukocyte Transfusion ,Infectious Diseases ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Female ,Bone marrow ,Complication ,business ,Granulocytes - Abstract
Aspergillus sinusitis is usually a lethal condition in bone marrow transplanted patients. We report the case of a patient known to have a sinus infection with Aspergillus flavus before treatment with allogenic bone marrow transplantation for a refractory acute myelogenous leukemia. Exacerbation of the sinusitis during the neutropenic period required a multidisciplinary approach. Cure was achieved after treatment with a combination of surgery (Caldwell-Luc procedure), long term ABCD (amphotericin B colloidal dispersion) therapy (7 months) and granulocyte transfusions during the period preceding engraftment. The use of granulocyte transfusion in this salvage setting is discussed. Aggressive multimodality management of aspergillus sinusitis in immunosuppressed patients may lead to a cure and might not preclude allogenic transplantation.
- Published
- 1997
33. Myeloablative therapy for primary resistant multiple myeloma
- Author
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Raymond Alexanian, Jeane P. Hester, Kay Delasalle, Richard E. Champlin, and Meletios A. Dimopoulos
- Subjects
Oncology ,Adult ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Blood stem cell ,Time Factors ,Drug Resistance ,Antineoplastic Agents ,Early Therapy ,Biology ,Transplantation, Autologous ,Bone Marrow ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,In patient ,Dexamethasone ,Multiple myeloma ,Bone Marrow Transplantation ,Response rate (survey) ,Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation ,Cell Biology ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Transplantation ,Immunology ,Molecular Medicine ,Stem cell ,Multiple Myeloma ,Developmental Biology ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Myeloablative therapy supported by autologous bone marrow or blood stem cell transplantation was assessed in 41 patients who had multiple myeloma resistant to vincristine-doxorubicin by continuous infusion with high-dose dexamethasone (VAD) or other high-dose dexamethasone regimens. In patients who had high or intermediate tumor mass, the myeloma cell mass was reduced by more than 75% in 56% of patients and the survival time quadrupled in comparison with that of a matched control group. Later treatment resulted in a lower response rate and shorter remission. Current myeloablative regimens supported by autologous stem cells provided a useful treatment for patients who had advanced primary resistant multiple myeloma. Such treatment should be given early in the disease course to provide the best chance for remission, collecting blood stem cells with facility, and preventing complications that would increase the risk of the procedure.
- Published
- 1995
34. Collection of peripheral-blood diploid cells from chronic myelogenous leukemia patients early in the recovery phase from myelosuppression induced by intensive-dose chemotherapy
- Author
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Terry L. Smith, Eric Feldman, Moshe Talpaz, Albert B. Deisseroth, Hagop M. Kantarjian, Jan Liang, Leslie Calvert, Jeane P. Hester, Mary Beth Rios, and Martin Korbling
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Cancer Research ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Daunorubicin ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Cell Separation ,Philadelphia chromosome ,Peripheral blood mononuclear cell ,Gastroenterology ,Bone Marrow ,Internal medicine ,Leukemia, Myelogenous, Chronic, BCR-ABL Positive ,Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols ,medicine ,Humans ,Mitoxantrone ,Chemotherapy ,business.industry ,Remission Induction ,Cytarabine ,Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Hematopoietic Stem Cells ,Diploidy ,Fludarabine ,Oncology ,Immunology ,Female ,business ,Vidarabine ,Chronic myelogenous leukemia ,medicine.drug - Abstract
PURPOSE To evaluate whether intensive chemotherapy followed by peripheral stem-cell (PSC) collections during early hematopoietic recovery results in a higher percentage of diploid cell collections in patients with Philadelphia chromosome (Ph)-positive chronic myelogenous leukemia (CML). PATIENTS AND METHODS Fifty-five adults with Ph-positive CML received intensive chemotherapy with daunorubicin and high-dose cytarabine (ara-C) (DAUNO-HDAC; 26 patients) or fludarabine, high-dose ara-C, and mitoxantrone (FAM; 29 patients). Collections of the peripheral mononuclear cells were initiated when the WBC count was > or = 0.8 x 10(3)/microL. Simultaneous peripheral and marrow samples were subjected to cytogenetic studies. RESULTS Thirty-eight of 55 patients (69%) were able to undergo the PSC collections. The rate of collection was higher in chronic phase (26 of 30 patients; 87%) than in accelerated (11 of 17; 65%) and blastic phases (1 of 8; 12%). Among the 30 patients in chronic phase, cytogenetic analyses of PSC showed cytogenetic responses (Ph-positive < 95%) in 60%, which were major (Ph < 35%) in 43% and complete (Ph = 0%) in 27%. Seven of 19 patients with simultaneous studies (37%; 23% of total) had a significantly lower percentage of Ph-positive cells in the peripheral collection compared with the marrow collection; one had the reverse phenomenon (5%; 3% of total). Cytogenetic responses were modest in both peripheral and marrow collections in CML accelerated and blastic phases. Myelosuppression-associated complications were frequent, resulting in febrile episodes in 76% of patients. CONCLUSION PSC collection during early hematopoietic recovery from intensive chemotherapy allowed the collection of diploid-rich stem cells, mostly in chronic-phase CML. The approach could be used for in vivo purging before autologous stem-cell transplantation (ASCT).
- Published
- 1995
35. Intensive chemotherapy with blood progenitor transplantation for primary resistant multiple myeloma
- Author
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Raymond Alexanian, Yung Huh, Jeane P. Hester, Meletios A. Dimopoulos, and Richard E. Champlin
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Adult ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Cyclophosphamide ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Drug Resistance ,Hematopoietic stem cell transplantation ,Gastroenterology ,Transplantation, Autologous ,Internal medicine ,Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols ,medicine ,Humans ,Leukapheresis ,Multiple myeloma ,Chemotherapy ,business.industry ,Platelet Count ,Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation ,Hematology ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Combined Modality Therapy ,Surgery ,Transplantation ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Treatment Outcome ,Bone marrow ,business ,Multiple Myeloma ,Busulfan ,medicine.drug ,Granulocytes - Abstract
This study assessed the feasibility and effect of blood progenitors as the only source of haemopoietic support for myeloablative therapy for patients with primary resistant multiple myeloma and markedly infiltrated bone marrow. 17 patients with advanced, primary resistant myeloma received a priming regimen of cyclophosphamide (3 g/m2) and etoposide (900 mg/m2) with GM-CSF. During haematological recovery, at least 2 x 10(6) CD34+ mononuclear cells/kg were collected from each patient with 4-12 leukaphereses. High-dose chemotherapy was then given which consisted of thiotepa (750 mg/m2), busulfan (10 mg/kg) and cyclophosphamide (120 mg/kg) followed by reinfusion of the blood progenitors. Haemopoietic reconstitution was rapid with recovery of granulocytes to > 1.0 x 10(9)/l after a median of 10 d and of platelets to 50 x 10(9)/l after a median of 29 d. The myeloma responded in 10/17 patients for a projected median duration of at least 12 months. Survival was prolonged significantly in comparison with the outcome of control patients who did not receive intensive treatment. Blood progenitors, assessed from the number of CD34+ cells, produced early haemopoietic recovery after myeloablative therapy that induced sustained control of advanced and resistant multiple myeloma.
- Published
- 1994
36. Abnormalities of von Willebrand factor multimers in drug-associated thrombotic microangiopathies
- Author
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Margie A. Harris, Deane Charba, Jeane P. Hester, and Joel L. Moake
- Subjects
Hemolytic anemia ,Adult ,Male ,Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Thrombotic microangiopathy ,Adolescent ,Polymers ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Von Willebrand factor ,hemic and lymphatic diseases ,Cyclosporin a ,von Willebrand Factor ,Medicine ,Humans ,Platelet ,Vascular Diseases ,Antigens ,Aged ,Electrophoresis, Agar Gel ,Chemotherapy ,biology ,business.industry ,Microcirculation ,Sodium Dodecyl Sulfate ,Thrombosis ,Hematology ,medicine.disease ,Pathophysiology ,Immunology ,biology.protein ,Cyclosporine ,Female ,business ,Chronic myelogenous leukemia - Abstract
Six patients with thrombotic microangiopathy associated with drug therapy had serial analyses of von Willebrand factor (vWF) multimeric patterns in their EDTA-plasma samples by sodium dodecyl sulfate-1% agarose gel electrophoresis and autoradiography. In the plasma of five patients (one with chronic myelogenous leukemia, two with prostatic cancer, and two with lymphoma), vWF abnormalities were observed during evolution of the thrombotic microangiopathy. These abnormalities were either the presence of unusually large (UL)vWF multimers of the type similar to those found within, and released or secreted by, endothelial cells (three patients) or a relative decrease in the largest plasma vWF multimers of the type that can be induced to attach to platelets (one patient) or both vWF abnormalities in different serial samples (one patient). In the one cardiac transplant patient who did not develop vWF multimeric abnormalities associated with thrombotic microangiopathy, vWF antigen levels were elevated more than threefold. This later individual received therapy with cyclosporin A alone. The other five thrombotic microangiopathy patients received cyclosporin A in combination with other chemotherapeutic agents (two patients); mitomycin-C, along with other chemotherapy (two patients); or multiple chemotherapeutic drugs, but not cyclosporin A or mitomycin C (one patient). The finding of vWF multimeric abnormalities during serial analysis of plasma samples from five of six patients with drug-associated thrombotic microangiopathy suggests the possibility that ULvWF forms derived from damaged or stimulated endothelial cells, along with the largest plasma vWF multimers, may be involved in the intravascular platelet clumping that is an essential part of the pathophysiology of this disorder.
- Published
- 1993
37. Depletion of patients' plasma tryptophan using tryptophan side-chain oxidase columns
- Author
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Robert A. Newman, Irwin H. Krakoff, Emil J. Freireich, Dah H. Ho, N. S. Brown, Ralph O. Wallerstein, Wendy Covington, Jeane P. Hester, and Juan R. Lin
- Subjects
chemistry.chemical_classification ,Cancer Research ,Oxidase test ,Chromatography ,Chemistry ,Plasma tryptophan ,Tryptophan ,General Medicine ,Plasmapheresis ,Precursor Cell Lymphoblastic Leukemia-Lymphoma ,medicine.disease ,Treatment period ,Peripheral blood ,Diet ,Mixed Function Oxygenases ,Enzyme ,Oncology ,Biochemistry ,Acute lymphocytic leukemia ,Tryptophan side chain oxidase ,medicine ,Humans ,Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid - Abstract
The use of the enzyme tryptophan side-chain oxidase, isolated from Pseudomonas XA, was explored in 3 patients with refractory acute lymphocytic leukemia. Patients were given either a low-tryptophan diet or tryptophan-free hyperalimentation, prior to and during therapy. Their plasma, separated by pheresis, was continuously passed through a tryptophan depletion column containing the immobilized tryptophan side-chain oxidase. Up to 4 plasma volumes were passed through the column daily, 5 days per week for 2-3 weeks, and plasma tryptophan levels, both free and total, were measured by high-performance liquid chromatography. Pre- and postcolumn plasma samples were collected throughout the pheresis procedure. All postcolumn plasma samples had unmeasurable tryptophan levels throughout the treatment period, whereas precolumn samples were always measurable. Generally, tryptophan levels of plasma isolated from peripheral blood decreased after therapy, but rebounded by the next day. The enzyme depletion column reduces circulating plasma tryptophan levels, and its use is well tolerated by patients. However, further development of this method will require study of the effects of diet and of the duration, interval, and frequency of use of this column on therapeutic efficacy. Problems include difficulties with extended diet compliance and apparently intensive mobilization of tryptophan from body stores, which may preclude the clinical application of this enzyme depletion column.
- Published
- 1993
38. The future: are we really being scientific?
- Author
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Jeane P. Hester
- Subjects
Hematology - Published
- 2001
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Apheresis: the first 30 years
- Author
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Jeane P. Hester
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Apheresis (linguistics) ,medicine ,Hematology ,business ,Surgery - Published
- 2001
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Peripheral blood stem cell transplantation for breast cancer patients with bone marrow metastases using GM-CSF priming
- Author
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Ralph O. Wallerstein and Jeane P. Hester
- Subjects
Oncology ,Adult ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Pathology ,Myeloid ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Immunology ,CD34 ,Priming (immunology) ,Blood Component Transfusion ,Breast Neoplasms ,Transplantation, Autologous ,Breast cancer ,Bone Marrow ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Progenitor cell ,Neoplasm Metastasis ,Chemotherapy ,business.industry ,Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation ,Granulocyte-Macrophage Colony-Stimulating Factor ,Hematology ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Cytokine ,Female ,Bone marrow ,business - Abstract
Twenty-seven patients with metastastic breast cancer to the bone marrow underwent successful collection of peripheral blood progenitor cells (PBPC) following GM-CSF cytokine priming and were engrafted following courses of high-dose chemotherapy. Myeloid engraftment was observed in a median of 12 days, with a range of 8–29 days. The cell dose infused correlated, although weakly, with days to engraftment, although assays of CFU-GM and CD34+ cells did not, suggesting refinement in such assays is needed. The failure to observe complete remission of the tumor suggests alternative chemotherapy regiments should be investigated.
- Published
- 1992
41. Subject Index, Vol. 84, 1990
- Author
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Michito Ichimaru, Jeane P. Hester, M. Sakaguchi, Glenn M. Mills, Takahiro Itoyama, Liisa Volin, Hideo Nakamura, Takaya Tanaka, Daniel Sedmak, Y. Koishihara, Lee Bairnsfather, Mark J. Melaragno, Yasunobu Yokoyama, Ei-ichi Yao, A.E. Bradshaw, Robert E. Wolf, Micheal Bowen, A. Takatsuki, Kawai S, E. Fonseca, Kuniaki Sasaki, Seiji Tokunaga, Delores G. Cordle, Naoyuki Katano, Dimitris A. Papanastasiou, Ourania G. Papageorgiou, Kohji Ueda, Luis Bello López, Masuko Tagawa, Toshiro Hara, Ippei Sasagawa, Tammy R. Bordelon, Saroj Vadhan-Raj, Kanji Sakamoto, Yoshitoshi Itoh, Ruth Y. Wernli, J. Matsushita, Tapani Ruutu, Isao Nakamura, Toshiaki Kamei, Keshava Prasad, F. Manso, Hideki Kuriki, Keiji Sawada, Christopher L. Reading, Naoki Sadamori, Naoshi Takeyama, G.J. Ventura, M. Kawakita, Bertha A. Bouroncle, William L. Marsh, Nicholas G. Beratis, Mari Nagata, Takeo Fujimoto, Ronald G. Strauss, Iris Th. Spiliopoulou, Tomoyuki Taniguchi, Bruce A. Baethge, Karl S. Theil, K. Shibuya, and Hiroyuki Shimizu
- Subjects
Index (economics) ,Statistics ,Subject (documents) ,Hematology ,General Medicine ,Mathematics - Published
- 1990
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. G-CSF therapy for patients relapsing after allogeneic bone marrow transplantation
- Author
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Moshe Talpaz, Sergio Giralt, Rakesh Mehra, Hagop M. Kantarjian, Jeane P. Hester, James Gajewski, A. Diesseroth, Richard E. Champlin, K. Van Besien, Donna Przepiorka, and Borje S. Andersson
- Subjects
business.industry ,Marrow transplantation ,Physiology (medical) ,Immunology ,G-csf therapy ,Medicine ,Autogenous bone ,business ,Pathology and Forensic Medicine - Published
- 1994
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Changes in in vitro function of apheresis platelet concentrates (PC) relative to pre-apheresis donor plateletrich plasma (D-PRP)
- Author
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G.J. Ventura and Jeane P. Hester
- Subjects
Apheresis ,Chemistry ,Immunology ,Platelet ,Hematology ,Pharmacology ,In vitro ,Function (biology) - Published
- 1990
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Panel II: Dosage and scheduling regimens for erythrocyte-sedimenting macromolecules
- Author
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John Milton Mishler, Ronald G. Strauss, Douglas W. Huestis, Jeane P. Hester, and Gail Rock
- Subjects
Pediatrics ,medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Scheduling (production processes) ,Medicine ,Hematology ,General Medicine ,Computational biology ,business - Published
- 1983
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Chronic myelogenous leukemia: a multivariate analysis of the associations of patient characteristics and therapy with survival
- Author
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Ronald S. Walters, Jeane P. Hester, Emil J. Freireich, Hagop M. Kantarjian, Edmund A. Gehan, Geert Bligham, Michael J. Keating, Moshe Talpaz, Kenneth B. McCredie, and Terry L. Smith
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Thrombocytosis ,business.industry ,Anemia ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Immunology ,Splenectomy ,Cell Biology ,Hematology ,medicine.disease ,Philadelphia chromosome ,Biochemistry ,Gastroenterology ,Surgery ,Basophilia ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Weight loss ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Bone marrow ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Chronic myelogenous leukemia - Abstract
The prognostic importance of patient pretreatment clinical and laboratory features was investigated in a group of 303 patients with Philadelphia chromosome-positive benign-phase chronic myelogenous leukemia. Intensive chemotherapy was given to 97 patients, and 78 underwent an early elective splenectomy. The overall median survival time, dated from hospital admission, was 39 months. Patient characteristics associated with shortened survival were age 60 years or older, black race, the presence of hepatomegaly, splenomegaly, symptoms, weight loss, and poor performance status. Adverse blood and bone marrow parameters were anemia, thrombocytosis or thrombocytopenia, a high proportion of peripheral blasts plus promyelocytes or of basophils, a high proportion of marrow blasts or basophils, decreased marrow megakaryocytes, and cytogenetic abnormalities in addition to the Philadelphia chromosome. Several of these factors were interrelated. A multivariate regression analysis demonstrated that the combination blood basophilia, race, additional cytogenetic abnormalities, age and marrow basophilia had the strongest predictive relationship to survival time. This resulted in a model segregating patients into low-, intermediate-, and high-risk groups, with median survivals of 53, 39, and 25 months, respectively. Another model was derived that did not include the marrow features and identified splenomegaly and platelet counts as adding to the prognosis prediction by blood basophilia, race, and age. Evaluation of the effect of therapy, after adjusting for differences in prognostic characteristics, showed that intensive chemotherapy was associated with survival prolongation among patients at intermediate and high risk of death. We conclude that a combination of pretreatment factors identifies different risk subcategories in patients with chronic myelogenous leukemia and is helpful in assessing overall prognosis and treatment effect.
- Published
- 1985
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Rescue by peripheral blood mononuclear cells in dogs from bone marrow failure after total-body irradiation
- Author
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John H. Jardine, Jeane P. Hester, Axel R. Zander, G. L. Raulston, Dennis A. Johnston, C. A. Gleiser, Wu J, G. Spitzer, Gray Kn, and Kenneth B. McCredie
- Subjects
Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Immunology ,Bone Marrow Cells ,Buffy coat ,Peripheral blood mononuclear cell ,Monocytes ,Leukocyte Count ,Dogs ,Bone Marrow ,medicine ,Cell separation ,Animals ,Immunology and Allergy ,Leukapheresis ,Lymphocytes ,Platelet Count ,business.industry ,Bone marrow failure ,Hematology ,Total body irradiation ,Hematopoietic Stem Cells ,medicine.disease ,Hematopoiesis ,Transplantation ,Haematopoiesis ,Homologous blood ,Lymphocyte Transfusion ,business ,Whole-Body Irradiation ,Granulocytes - Abstract
In order to determine the minimum dose of buffy coat cells necessary to achieve hematopoietic rescue following supralethal irradiation, mongrel dogs under general anesthesia were subjected to leukacytapheresis using three different techniques of cell separation. The buffy coats were frozen with dimethylsulfoxide and stored at -196 degrees C until transfused. Sixteen dogs were irradiated with 800 rads and were supported with antibiotics and transfusions of irradiated homologous blood. They were transfused with the frozen and thawed buffy coat cells, and, if they survived, they were followed for 100 days, sacrificed, and their tissues studied. The mean yield of mononuclear cells during leukocytapheresis ranged from 4.1 +/- 2.0 X 10(9) (mean +/- SD) to 6.0 +/- 4.0 X 10(9) for the three leukacytapheresis methods; one technique was not as satisfactory as the other two. Six of the 16 dogs fully recovered with evidence of marrow rescue; however, only one had a dose of mononuclear cells less than 11.1 X 10(9). These data indicate that seven to 17 leukacytapheresis procedures would be required to reconstitute a 70 kilogram patient. These preliminary findings suggest that, because the yields of transplantable cells with current technology are not adequate, the transplantation potential of buffy coat cells exposed to mobilizing agents should be evaluated.
- Published
- 1984
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Effects of Liposomal Amphotericin B on Human Peripheral Blood Monocytes and Lymphocytes
- Author
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Charles Gschwind, Jeane P. Hester, James M. Reuben, Gabriel Lopez-Berestein, and Jim Turpin
- Subjects
Drug ,Liposome ,biology ,Chemistry ,Lymphocyte ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Pharmaceutical Science ,Long-term potentiation ,Pharmacology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Immune system ,Concanavalin A ,Amphotericin B ,Immunology ,medicine ,biology.protein ,Cytotoxicity ,medicine.drug ,media_common - Abstract
The effects of free amphotericin B (AmpB) and liposome-encapsulated amphotericin B (L-AmpB) on normal human peripheral blood monocytes (HPBM) and lymphocytes were studied. L-AmpB did not reduce HPBM H2O2-generating capacity even at doses of 100 µg/ml. there was no direct induction of H2O2by either AmpB or L-AmpB. L-AmpB (at concentrations of 10µg/ml) did not suppress lymphocyte blastogenic responses (LBRs) to concanavalin A and phyto-hemagglutin. Similar concentrations of AmpB caused a greater than 30% decrease in LBRs related to a direct effect on lymphocytes. Antibody-dependent cell-mediated cytotoxicity and natural killer cell activity were markedly reduced by AmpB at a concentration of 5 µg/ml but not by L-AmpB. L-AmpB was shown to be less toxic to lymphocytes and HPBM than AmpB; however, no potentiation of the immune parameters tested was observed with either drug.
- Published
- 1988
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Principles of blood separation and component extraction in a disposable continuous-flow single-stage channel
- Author
-
Emil J Freireich, Victor R. Kruger, Jeane P. Hester, Robert Melroy Kellogg, Alfred Paul Mulzet, and Kenneth B. McCredie
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Chromatography ,Materials science ,Single stage ,Component (thermodynamics) ,Continuous flow ,Blood separation ,Immunology ,Extraction (chemistry) ,Cell Biology ,Hematology ,Buffy coat ,Biochemistry ,Surgery ,medicine ,Communication channel ,Whole blood - Abstract
A single-stage disposable channel and seal that provides for leukocyte and granulocyte collection by continuous-flow cell separation (CFCS) has been designed by the IBM Corporation. This paper describes (1) the separation characteristics of whole blood as it responds to varying gravitational (G) forces and flow rates through the channel; (2) the mechanism by which the buffy coat accumulates and is extracted; (3) the efficiency of extraction; (4) those donor and procedural variables that contribute to the final yield; (5) posttransfusion increment response in patients; and (6) the functional integrity of the cells collected.
- Published
- 1979
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. 5-azacytidine and arabinosyl adenine for the treatment of acute leukemia
- Author
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Kenneth B. McCredie, Jeane P. Hester, Emil J. Freireich, and Gerald P. Bodey
- Subjects
Cancer Research ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Acute leukemia ,Cancer chemotherapy ,business.industry ,Nausea ,Complete remission ,Arabinosyl cytosine ,Hematology ,Gastroenterology ,Diarrhea ,Oncology ,Internal medicine ,Toxicity ,medicine ,Vomiting ,medicine.symptom ,business - Abstract
The combination of 5-azacytidine and arabinosyl cytosine was used as secondary treatment for patients with acute leukemia. Only five of 39 evaluable patients achieved a complete remission, although 15 patients showed some response to this therapy. The median duration of complete remission was only 3 3 4 months. Major toxicity included myelosuppression, nausea, vomiting and diarrhea. The results of this study were no better than those obtained previously with 5-azacytidine alone.
- Published
- 1977
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. High dose cyclophosphamide, BCNU, and VP-16 (CBV) as a conditioning regimen for allogeneic bone marrow transplantation for patients with acute leukemia
- Author
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Sundar Jagannath, Axel R. Zander, F. Swan, Leonard J. Horwitz, Nanette Larry, Michael J. Keating, Lijda Vellekoop, Kevin J. Cockerill, Steven J. Culbert, Karel A. Dicke, Kenneth B. McCredie, Jeane P. Hester, and Gary Spitzer
- Subjects
Cancer Research ,Acute leukemia ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Carmustine ,Cyclophosphamide ,business.industry ,medicine.disease ,Gastroenterology ,Surgery ,Transplantation ,Leukemia ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Oncology ,Internal medicine ,Medicine ,Bone marrow ,business ,Meningitis ,Etoposide ,medicine.drug - Abstract
A high dose combination chemotherapy regimen (CBV) consisting of cyclophosphamide (1.5 gm/m2 day 1 to day 4); BCNU (300 mg/m2 day 1) and etoposide (100 mg/m2 every 12 hours for 6 doses), followed by bone marrow transplant from human leukocyte antigen (HLA) identical sibling donors, was evaluated in 29 patients in whom acute leukemia was in relapse or remission. Engraftment of donor cell type occurred in all but one of 21 patients, in whom marker differences between donor and recipient were established. Two of 11 patients transplanted during relapse of the disease, lived beyond 1 year after bone marrow transplantation. One patient died free of leukemia, 41 months after transplantation of meningitis. Two of seven patients transplanted during the second remission of the disease, are alive and free of leukemia at 42+, and 8+ months. All patients transplanted during the third or fourth remission of the disease have died from either a further relapse, or transplant related causes. The low incidence of organ toxicity with CBV allows for further dose escalation of its drug components.
- Published
- 1987
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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