Allogeneic Bone Marrow Transplantation in Multiple Myeloma

Gösta Gahrton(Integrated Cardio Metabolic Centre), S Tura(Integrated Cardio Metabolic Centre), Per Ljungman(Integrated Cardio Metabolic Centre), Coralie Bélanger(Integrated Cardio Metabolic Centre), Lena Brandt(Integrated Cardio Metabolic Centre), Michèle Cavo(Integrated Cardio Metabolic Centre), Thierry Façon(Integrated Cardio Metabolic Centre), A Grañena(Integrated Cardio Metabolic Centre), Martin Gore(Integrated Cardio Metabolic Centre), Aloïs Gratwohl(Integrated Cardio Metabolic Centre), Bob Löwenberg(Integrated Cardio Metabolic Centre), J Nikoskelainen(Turku University Hospital), Josy Reiffers(Integrated Cardio Metabolic Centre), Diana Samson(Integrated Cardio Metabolic Centre), Leo F. Verdonck(Integrated Cardio Metabolic Centre), Liisa Volin(Integrated Cardio Metabolic Centre)
New England Journal of Medicine
October 31, 1991
Cited by 386Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

BACKGROUND AND METHODS: In contrast to autologous bone marrow transplants for hematologic cancers, allogeneic transplants contain no tumor cells that might cause a relapse. We report the results of such allogeneic bone marrow transplantation using HLA-compatible sibling donors in 90 patients with multiple myeloma performed in 26 European centers between 1983 and 1989. RESULTS: At the time of the most recent follow-up, 79 months after the start of the study, 47 patients were alive and 43 were dead. The rate of complete remission after bone marrow transplantation was 43 percent for all patients and 58 percent for the patients who had engraftment. The actuarial survival at 76 months was 40 percent. The median duration of relapse-free survival among patients who were in complete remission after bone marrow transplantation was 48 months. The stage of the disease at diagnosis and the number of treatment regimens tried before bone marrow transplantation were predictive of the likelihood of complete remission after engraftment. There were trends toward longer survival among patients who were responsive to treatment before bone marrow transplantation, patients with Stage I disease at diagnosis, and patients who had received only first-line treatment before transplantation, as compared with those who were not responsive, those with Stage II or III disease at diagnosis, and those who had received three or more lines of treatment, but the differences in these factors were not statistically significant. Two post-transplantation factors predicted better long-term survival: complete remission after engraftment and grade I graft-versus-host disease, rather than grade II, III, or IV. CONCLUSIONS: Allogeneic bone marrow transplantation with the use of HLA-matched sibling donors appears to be a promising method of treatment for some patients with multiple myeloma.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis