Extensive studies have tested the clinical impact of double and triple sequential transplants as front-line therapy in MM, following the suggestion that dose escalation can overcome the marked drug resistance characteristic of this disease, but the superiority of such approaches vs one single transplant has still to be demonstrated. The aim of our study was to evaluate the feasibility and efficacy of high-dose idarubicine intensification of a standard busulphan-melphalan conditioning regimen in MM. Twenty-eight patients (median age 55 years) with sensitive disease received PBSCT after high-dose idarubicine combined with busulphan and melphalan and followed by s.c. rhG-CSF until PMN recovery. The most severe toxicity was represented by oral mucositis which resolved with hemopoietic reconstitution. Overall response and CR rate were 52% and 40%, respectively. Currently, 36 patients are alive and 19 are progression-free a median of 20 months (12-36) from transplant. The 3-year projected probability of progression-free survival for patients transplanted after first-line treatment is 60%. The combination of Ida/Bu/Melph appears a promising alternative regimen for PBSCT in myeloma, with low transplant-related toxicity and fast hematological recovery. Long-term follow-up and a prospective randomized study, now ongoing, will probably clarify whether an idarubicine-intensified regimen will result in superior outcomes to conventional conditioning and even be comparable to a double consecutive transplant program.

High dose idarubicine, busulphan e melphalan as conditioning for autilogous blood stem cell transplantation in multiple myeloma. A feasibility study / Meloni, Giovanna; Capria, S; Trasarti, S; Ferrazza, G; Micozzi, Alessandra; Petrucci, Mt; Simone, F; Trisolini, Sm; Mandelli, Franco. - In: BONE MARROW TRANSPLANTATION. - ISSN 0268-3369. - 26:(2000), pp. 1045-1049. [10.1038/sj.bmt.1702668]

High dose idarubicine, busulphan e melphalan as conditioning for autilogous blood stem cell transplantation in multiple myeloma. A feasibility study

MELONI, Giovanna;MICOZZI, Alessandra;MANDELLI, Franco
2000

Abstract

Extensive studies have tested the clinical impact of double and triple sequential transplants as front-line therapy in MM, following the suggestion that dose escalation can overcome the marked drug resistance characteristic of this disease, but the superiority of such approaches vs one single transplant has still to be demonstrated. The aim of our study was to evaluate the feasibility and efficacy of high-dose idarubicine intensification of a standard busulphan-melphalan conditioning regimen in MM. Twenty-eight patients (median age 55 years) with sensitive disease received PBSCT after high-dose idarubicine combined with busulphan and melphalan and followed by s.c. rhG-CSF until PMN recovery. The most severe toxicity was represented by oral mucositis which resolved with hemopoietic reconstitution. Overall response and CR rate were 52% and 40%, respectively. Currently, 36 patients are alive and 19 are progression-free a median of 20 months (12-36) from transplant. The 3-year projected probability of progression-free survival for patients transplanted after first-line treatment is 60%. The combination of Ida/Bu/Melph appears a promising alternative regimen for PBSCT in myeloma, with low transplant-related toxicity and fast hematological recovery. Long-term follow-up and a prospective randomized study, now ongoing, will probably clarify whether an idarubicine-intensified regimen will result in superior outcomes to conventional conditioning and even be comparable to a double consecutive transplant program.
2000
autologous stem cell transplantation; multiple myeloma; high-dose idarubicine
01 Pubblicazione su rivista::01a Articolo in rivista
High dose idarubicine, busulphan e melphalan as conditioning for autilogous blood stem cell transplantation in multiple myeloma. A feasibility study / Meloni, Giovanna; Capria, S; Trasarti, S; Ferrazza, G; Micozzi, Alessandra; Petrucci, Mt; Simone, F; Trisolini, Sm; Mandelli, Franco. - In: BONE MARROW TRANSPLANTATION. - ISSN 0268-3369. - 26:(2000), pp. 1045-1049. [10.1038/sj.bmt.1702668]
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11573/89231
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