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Bone marrow transplantation for chronic granulocytic leukemia.

Authors :
Lehn P
Devergie A
Benbunan M
Lemercier N
Raffoux C
Rabian C
Vilmer E
Azogui O
Irti T
Gluckman E
Source :
Journal of the National Cancer Institute [J Natl Cancer Inst] 1986 Jun; Vol. 76 (6), pp. 1301-5.
Publication Year :
1986

Abstract

Thirty-seven patients with chronic granulocytic leukemia have been treated with supralethal chemoradiotherapy followed by transplantation of bone marrow from HLA-identical donors. All patients showed engraftment, and the Philadelphia chromosome (PH1) disappeared in each case. Four patients had syngeneic grafts before blast crisis and are still alive; 2 are in remission not maintained by therapy, and 2 others are receiving chemotherapy after having relapsed in the chronic phase. Thirty-three patients had allogeneic grafts; only 2 received the grafts during blast crisis, and neither is a long-term survivor. Of the 13 patients who had grafts in the accelerated phase, 6 died of complications related to the transplantation, and 1 died after a myeloblastic relapse. Thus 6 patients are in unmaintained remission with a median follow-up of 13 months. Eighteen patients received grafts in the chronic phase. All 10 survivors are in unmaintained remission with a median follow-up of 14 months; in this group, no patient has relapsed. The granulocytic hyperplasia of the chronic phase can be more effectively ablated than established blastic leukemia. The mortality rate of transplant-related complications must be weighted against the typical rate of progression of chronic granulocytic leukemia. Although a longer follow-up period is needed for full evaluation, bone marrow transplantation may now be offered to patients in the chronic phase in an attempt to achieve long-term survival or cure of more than one-half of these patients.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
0027-8874
Volume :
76
Issue :
6
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Journal of the National Cancer Institute
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
3520072