Blood Transfusion Research - Blood Donation, Blood Types, Leukemia

Blood Transfusion Research Today is a free monthly online journal that collates and summarizes the latest research about Blood Transfusion, including details on blood donation, blood types, leukemia.


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Response to donor lymphocyte infusions for chronic myeloid leukemia is dose-dependent: the importance of escalating the cell dose to maximize therapeutic efficacy.

Simula MP, Marktel S, Fozza C, Kaeda J, Szydlo RM, Nadal E, Bua M, Rahemtulla A, Kanfer E, Marin D, Olavarria E, Goldman JM, Apperley JF, Dazzi F

Department of Hematology, Imperial College at Hammersmith Hospital, London, UK.

Donor lymphocyte infusions (DLI) are an effective treatment for patients with chronic myeloid leukemia (CML) in relapse after allografting but the optimal cell dose has yet to be identified. To address this question, we investigated the factors affecting the dose required to achieve remission (effective cell dose, (ECD)) in 81 patients treated with an escalating dose regimen. The overall proportion of patients who achieved a molecular remission was 88%. The cumulative proportion of remitters increased significantly at each dose level. With a CD3(+) cell dose < or =10(7)/kg, 56% of patients in molecular/cytogenetic relapse obtained molecular remission, whereas only 20% of those in hematologic relapse did so. At the same cell dose, 58% of patients who received lymphocytes from volunteer unrelated donors achieved remission, as compared to 29% of those who received DLI from sibling donors. We conclude that the response to DLI is dose-dependent and that the ECD is influenced by the quantity and phase of CML at relapse and degree of donor/recipient histocompatibility.

Published 25 April 2007 in Leukemia, 21(5): 943-8.
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