Bone marrow transplantation
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Bone Marrow Transplant. · Feb 1990
Bone marrow transplantation for advanced acute leukemia: a pilot study of high-energy total body irradiation, cyclophosphamide and continuous infusion etoposide.
Leukemic relapse following bone marrow transplantation (BMT) for acute leukemia is the most common cause of treatment failure. Because a more intensive pre-transplant preparative regimen may prevent disease recurrence we have designed a novel intensive conditioning regimen for BMT using high-energy total body irradiation (total dose 850 cGy; energy 24 MV; midplane received dose rate 26 cGy/min; day -6) followed by cyclophosphamide (dose 50 mg/kg/day; schedule 2-h infusion; days -5, -4, -3) and continuous infusion high-dose etoposide (dose 500 mg/m2/day; schedule: 22-h infusion; days -5, -4, -3). Between February 1987 and December 1988, 45 patients with advanced acute leukemia received transplants using this regimen. ⋯ Nineteen patients received histocompatible allogeneic transplants and one underwent syngeneic transplantation. Of seven patients with acute lymphoblastic leukemia transplanted in refractory relapse, three have had an overt relapse, three died of interstitial pneumonitis and only one survives disease free 15 months after transplantation. Of 13 patients with acute non-lymphocytic leukemia and variants (11 who were transplanted in relapse) three died without relapse, three have relapsed and seven survive disease free from 9 to 27 months (median 20 months) after transplantation.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)