| Literature DB >> 18245655 |
Mohamad Mohty1, Myriam Labopin, Reza Tabrizzi, Niklas Theorin, Axel A Fauser, Alessandro Rambaldi, Johan Maertens, Shimon Slavin, Ignazio Majolino, Arnon Nagler, Didier Blaise, Vanderson Rocha.
Abstract
This retrospective study reported the outcome of 97 adult acute lymphoblastic leukemia patients who received a reduced-intensity conditioning allogeneic stem cell transplantation. With a median follow-up of 2.8 years, two year overall-survival, leukemia-free survival and non-relapse mortality were significantly better in patients transplanted in first complete remission (CR1, 52+/-9%; 42+/-10%; and 18+/-7% respectively) compared with those transplanted in more advanced phase (p=0.003, p=0.002 and p=0.01 respectively). In multivariate analysis, disease status (CR1 vs. advanced; p=0.001) and chronic graft-vs-host disease (p=0.01) were associated with an improved overall-survival, suggesting that reduced-intensity conditioning allogeneic stem cell transplantation is feasible in patients with high risk lymphoblastic leukemia in remission at transplantation.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2008 PMID: 18245655 DOI: 10.3324/haematol.11960
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Haematologica ISSN: 0390-6078 Impact factor: 9.941