Abstract
We examined retrospectively 44 patients with refractory acute leukemia (acute myeloid leukemia (AML)/acute lymphoblastic leukemia = 25/19) who underwent allogeneic transplantation at our center between 11/1990 and 04/2004. The median leukemic blasts was 25% and age 28 years (range, 3-56). Twenty-one patients had untreated relapse, 13 failed reinduction, eight in partial remission and two aplastic. Conditioning was myeloablative using cyclophosphamide, busulfan, total-body irradiation and etoposide (Bu/Cy/VP, n = 22; TBI/Cy/VP, n = 17; others, n = 5) followed by marrow or peripheral blood transplant (n = 23/21) from unrelated or related donors (n = 28/16). All patients had graft-versus- host disease (GVHD) prophylaxis with cyclosporin and methotrexate. One patient experienced late graft failure. Severe acute-GVHD and chronic- GVHD appeared in eight and 14 patients, respectively. Thirteen patients (30%) remain alive after a median of 25.3 months (range, 2.4-134.1); with 31 deaths, mostly from relapse (n = 15) and infections (n = 12). Overall survival (OS) and progression-free survival (PFS) at 5 years was 28 and 26%, respectively. OS and PFS were significantly better with blasts ≤20% and time to transplant ≤1 year while transplant-related mortality was less with the use of TBI. We conclude that patients with refractory leukemia can benefit from allogeneic BMT, especially with ≤20% marrow blast. © 2006 Nature Publishing Group. All rights reserved.
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Oyekunle, A. A., Kröger, N., Zabelina, T., Ayuk, F., Schieder, H., Renges, H., … Zander, A. R. (2006). Allogeneic stem-cell transplantation in patients with refractory acute leukemia: A long-term follow-up. Bone Marrow Transplantation, 37(1), 45–50. https://doi.org/10.1038/sj.bmt.1705207
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