E

E.J. Read

National Institutes of Health

Publishes on Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation, Immunotherapy and Immune Responses, T-cell and B-cell Immunology. 35 papers and 2.3k citations.

35Publications
2.3kTotal Citations

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Engraftment Kinetics After Nonmyeloablative Allogeneic Peripheral Blood Stem Cell Transplantation: Full Donor T-Cell Chimerism Precedes Alloimmune Responses
Cited by 528

Nonmyeloablative allogeneic stem cell transplantation has recently been explored as a safer alternative to conventional high-dose transplant regimens. Although a high incidence of mixed chimerism after nonmyeloablative procedures has been reported, the exact kinetics of engrafting donor cells in specific cellular lineages has yet to be defined. We investigated lineage-specific chimerism in 15 patients receiving an allogeneic peripheral blood stem cell (PBSC) transplant from an HLA-identical (n = 14) or a 5/6 antigen-matched sibling donor after a preparative regimen of cyclophosphamide and fludarabine. Donor chimerism was assessed weekly in T lymphocytes and myeloid cells by polymerase chain reaction (PCR) of minisatellite regions. Eight patients survived between 121 to 409 days after transplant. Ten of 14 patients surviving more than 30 days (71.4%) had delayed disease regression consistent with a graft-versus-malignancy (GVM) effect. One patient rejected the transplant with subsequent recovery of autologous hematopoiesis. Hematological recovery was rapid (median, 11 days to >/=500 neutrophils/microL) and was initially predominantly recipient in origin. Donor myeloid chimerism gradually supplanted recipient hematopoiesis and became fully donor in all survivors by 200 days after transplantation. In contrast, T-cell engraftment was more rapid, with full chimerism in 7 patients by day 30 and in 6 further patients by day 200 after cyclosporine withdrawal and donor lymphocyte infusion. Full donor T-cell engraftment preceded donor myeloid engraftment, acute graft-versus-host disease, and disease regression, consistent with a requirement for 100% donor T-cell chimerism for full expression of the alloresponse. These results emphasize the importance of lineage-specific chimerism analysis to successfully manipulate engraftment after nonmyeloablative allogeneic PBSC transplantation.

Tumor localization of adoptively transferred indium-111 labeled tumor infiltrating lymphocytes in patients with metastatic melanoma.
Beth Fisher, Beverly S. Packard, E.J. Read et al.|Journal of Clinical Oncology|1989
Cited by 333

Lymphoid cells infiltrating into human tumors can be expanded in vitro in medium containing interleukin-2 (IL-2). Adoptive transfer of these tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes (TIL) mediates potent antitumor effects in murine tumor models. Clinical trials to evaluate the efficacy of these cells in patients with advanced cancer are underway. We have investigated whether infused TIL labeled with indium 111 (111In) oxine can traffic and localize to metastatic deposits of tumor. Six patients with metastatic malignant melanoma who had multiple sites of subcutaneous, nodal, and/or visceral disease were the subjects of the study. The patients received cyclophosphamide 36 hours before receiving the intravenous (IV) infusion of TIL followed by IL-2 IV every eight hours. The distribution and localization of the TIL were evaluated using serial whole body gamma camera imaging, serial blood and urine samplings, and serial biopsies of tumor and normal tissue. 111In-labeled TIL localized to lung, liver, and spleen within two hours after the infusion of activity. Activity in the lung diminished within 24 hours. As early as 24 hours after injection of 111In-labeled TIL, localization of TIL to sites of metastatic deposits was demonstrated in all six patients using either imaging studies or biopsy specimens or both. 111In activity in tumor tissue biopsies ranged from three to 40 times greater than activity in normal tissue. A progressive increase in the radioactive counts at sites of tumor deposit was seen. This study shows that labeled TIL can localize preferentially to tumor, and provides information concerning the possible mechanism of the therapeutic effects of TIL.

CD34+ cell dose predicts survival, posttransplant morbidity, and rate of hematologic recovery after allogeneic marrow transplants for hematologic malignancies
Cited by 243Open Access

After autologous or allogeneic transplants of peripheral blood stem cells (PBSC), an adequate dose of CD34+ cells is necessary to ensure early and sustained hematopoietic engraftment and favorable clinical outcome. There are no comparable data on the relationship between CD34+ cell dose and recovery after allogeneic bone marrow transplants (BMT). Twenty-eight patients with hematologic malignancies received a BMT from an HLA-identical sibling, using T-cell depletion and cyclosporin for graft-versus-host disease prophylaxis and delayed donor lymphocyte transfusions in an attempt to prevent leukemia relapse. The treatment-related mortality (TRM), primarily due to infections and cytopenias, was significantly higher for 13 patients receiving less than 1 x 10(6) CD34+ cells/kg (64.9% +/- 12.8% v 6.9% +/- 6.4%, P = .003). Survival at a median follow-up of 1 year was also lower in the group receiving less than 1 x 10(6) CD34+ cells/kg (30.8% +/- 12.8 v 74.3% +/- 13.7%, P = .005). The CD34+ cell dose was the only variable significantly associated with TRM. The dose of CD34+ cells also correlated with speed of hematopoistic recovery. Patients receiving more than 2 x 10(6) CD34+ cells/kg showed significantly earlier recovery of monocytes and a trend for earlier recovery of lymphocytes. They achieved platelet and red blood cell transfusion independence earlier, required less granulocyte colony-stimulating factor support during ganciclovir treatment, and spent fewer days in the hospital after transplantation. These results suggest that, for allogeneic T-cell-depleted BMT, the higher CD34+ cell doses may improve outcome in engrafting patients.

In Vivo Distribution of Adoptively Transferred Indium- 111- Labeled Tumor Infiltrating Lymphocytes and Peripheral Blood Lymphocytes in Patients With Metastatic Melanoma
Kean D. Griffith, E.J. Read, Jorge A. Carrasquillo et al.|JNCI Journal of the National Cancer Institute|1989
Cited by 184

Patients with metastatic melanoma undergoing therapy with cyclophosphamide (CPM), tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes (TIL), and interleukin-2 (IL-2) were studied for the ability of their 111In-labeled TIL or peripheral blood lymphocytes (PBL) to localize in sites of tumor using gamma camera imaging and biopsies. Nineteen infusions of radiolabeled TIL were given to 18 patients, while five patients received radiolabeled autologous PBL during TIL therapy. Clear tumor localization was seen on 13 of 18 nuclear scan series performed on 111In-TIL recipients, while tumor was imaged in only one of four scan sequences on patients given 111In-PBL. Nineteen paired biopsies of tumor and normal skin were completed on 10 patients receiving 111In-TIL, while eight biopsies were done on three PBL patients receiving 111In-PBL. The mean percentage of total injectate activity localizing per gram of tumor tissue was 0.0049% in the TIL group and 0.0010% in the PBL group (P2 = .0004). The mean of the tumor to normal skin ratios of the 111In-TIL group was three times that for 111In-PBL (P2 = .0072). One patient was studied by nuclear scanning on three consecutive treatment courses of CPM, TIL, and IL-2. He initially demonstrated clear tumor localization by 111In-TIL at several sites, then faint localization with 111In-PBL at a single site, and subsequently positive tumor imaging on repeat 111In-TIL infusion at multiple sites. These results confirm and expand our initial data demonstrating that human TIL transferred with CPM pretreatment and followed by IL-2 preferentially localize to tumor sites and indicate that this localization is greater for TIL than PBL.