melphalan and Multiple-Organ-Failure

melphalan has been researched along with Multiple-Organ-Failure* in 5 studies

Reviews

1 review(s) available for melphalan and Multiple-Organ-Failure

ArticleYear
An overview of the use of high-dose melphalan with autologous stem cell transplantation for the treatment of AL amyloidosis.
    Bone marrow transplantation, 2001, Volume: 28, Issue:7

    Primary or AL amyloidosis results from a plasma cell dyscrasia in which fibrillar light chain protein deposition leads to organ failure and death. Standard treatment for AL amyloidosis has been oral melphalan and prednisone. However, this form of treatment modifies the natural history of this lethal disease only marginally, extending median survival from 13 months following diagnosis to 17 months. At Boston University Medical Center, we have developed treatment protocols using high-dose intravenous melphalan with autologous peripheral blood stem cell transplantation (HDM/SCT) to treat AL amyloidosis, and we have treated over 200 patients with HDM/SCT during the past six years. This extensive experience has shown that patients with AL amyloidosis, despite multisystem involvement and compromised organ function can tolerate this aggressive form of treatment. Furthermore, HDM/SCT results in durable hematologic responses in a substantial proportion of patients, and such responses are associated with clinical improvement, decreased amyloid-related organ dysfunction, and prolonged survival. However, toxicity from treatment is high (overall peri-transplant mortality, 14%), particularly for those patients with clinically significant cardiac involvement. For this reason, we believe a multidisciplinary management approach is essential when using HDM/SCT for treatment of AL amyloidosis. Based on our experience, we believe that HDM/SCT is the treatment of choice for patients with AL amyloidosis who have a good performance status and limited cardiac involvement at the time of diagnosis. HDM/SCT offers the best chance for hematologic remission, prolongation of survival, and reversal of amyloid-related disease. At the same time, we believe that HDM/SCT should continue to be examined in the context of clinical trials, directed at developing approaches to broaden the applicability of this therapy by minimizing toxicity and to increase the likelihood of complete hematologic responses.

    Topics: Academic Medical Centers; Adult; Aged; Aged, 80 and over; Alkylating Agents; Amyloidosis; Boston; Cardiomyopathies; Case Management; Clinical Trials as Topic; Combined Modality Therapy; Factor X Deficiency; Female; Forecasting; Hematopoietic Stem Cell Mobilization; Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation; Humans; Infusions, Intravenous; Male; Melphalan; Middle Aged; Multicenter Studies as Topic; Multiple Organ Failure; Nephrotic Syndrome; Patient Care Team; Patient Selection; Pilot Projects; Remission Induction; Renal Dialysis; Survival Analysis; Survival Rate; Transplantation Conditioning; Treatment Outcome

2001

Trials

2 trial(s) available for melphalan and Multiple-Organ-Failure

ArticleYear
Veno-occlusive disease of the liver after busulfan, melphalan, and thiotepa conditioning therapy: incidence, risk factors, and outcome.
    Biology of blood and marrow transplantation : journal of the American Society for Blood and Marrow Transplantation, 1999, Volume: 5, Issue:5

    The purpose of this study was to determine the incidence of veno-occlusive disease (VOD) after a high-dose regimen of busulfan, melphalan, and thiotepa and the risk factors for a more severe outcome. We followed 253 consecutive patients with malignant disorders who received autologous transplants after stem cell harvest followed by 12 mg/kg busulfan, 100 mg/m2 melphalan, and 500 mg/m2 thiotepa. Diagnosis of VOD was based on weight gain, hepatomegaly, and jaundice. Risk factors for moderate or severe VOD were identified using logistic regression models. VOD occurred in 70 of 253 patients (28%), of whom 31 (12%) had moderate and 11 (4%) severe VOD. The median day of onset of hyperbilirubinemia was day 9, significantly later than the onset of jaundice after our cyclophosphamide-based regimens (p < 0.001). Resolution of weight gain and jaundice, followed by their reappearance several weeks later, occurred in 23 of 70 patients with VOD and was an adverse prognostic sign. Risk factors for moderate or severe VOD were a diagnosis of lymphoma or myeloma (odds ratio [OR] 2.65 compared with breast cancer), tumor involvement in the liver (OR 3.95), fever in the month before transplant (OR 3.32), and prior radiation therapy (OR 2.70). We conclude that VOD after busulfan, melphalan, and thiotepa was less frequent and less severe and developed later than VOD after our historical cyclophosphamide-based regimens. Significant risk factors included a diagnosis other than breast cancer, hepatic metastases, persistent fever, and prior radiation therapy. This study suggests that alkylating agents of comparable overall toxicity differ in their liver toxicity.

    Topics: Adolescent; Adult; Aged; Antineoplastic Agents, Alkylating; Busulfan; Child; Child, Preschool; Cyclophosphamide; Female; Hematologic Neoplasms; Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation; Hepatic Veno-Occlusive Disease; Humans; Incidence; Liver Diseases; Male; Melphalan; Middle Aged; Multiple Organ Failure; Multivariate Analysis; Radiotherapy; Risk Factors; Survival Rate; Thiotepa; Transplantation Conditioning; Transplantation, Autologous; Treatment Outcome; Whole-Body Irradiation

1999
Isolated hyperthermic liver perfusion with chemotherapy for liver malignancy.
    Surgical oncology, 1994, Volume: 3, Issue:2

    In an open study of unresectable liver tumours, isolated regional perfusion with hyperthermia and cytotoxic drugs has been tested in 29 patients. Four patients had primary hepatocellular cancer, 10 patients had metastases from malignant melanoma, remaining from breast cancer, colorectal cancer, midgut carcinoids and miscellaneous primaries. At laparotomy the proper hepatic artery and portal vein were canulated and connected to a pump oxygenator. The inferior vena cava was canulated with a triple lumen catheter (Perfufix) allowing for porto-caval shunting, drainage of lower body and renal veins to the heart and separate drainage of liver veins to the pump oxygenator. Liver perfusion was performed with a mean flow of 900 ml per min. Melphalan and cis-platinum 0.5 mg/kg body-weight were added to the perfusate for 1 h after liver temperature reached 40 degrees C. Four patients died within 30 days of perfusion due to multiple organ failure. These patients had more than 50% of liver volume occupied by cancer. All surviving patients developed reversible hepato- and renal toxicity. Partial tumour regression was registered in 20% of the patients. Five patients have survived more than three years. Hyperthermic liver perfusion is feasible but in patients with massive liver tumour, there is a significant risk of developing multiple organ failure.

    Topics: Adult; Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols; Chemotherapy, Cancer, Regional Perfusion; Cisplatin; Humans; Hyperthermia, Induced; Liver Neoplasms; Melphalan; Middle Aged; Multiple Organ Failure; Survival Analysis

1994

Other Studies

2 other study(ies) available for melphalan and Multiple-Organ-Failure

ArticleYear
Outcome of AL amyloidosis after high-dose melphalan and autologous stem cell transplantation in Sweden, long-term results from all patients treated in 1994-2009.
    Bone marrow transplantation, 2016, Volume: 51, Issue:12

    High-dose melphalan and autologous stem cell transplantation (HDM/ASCT) is widely used in immunoglobulin light chain (AL) amyloidosis, but the benefit is debated mainly because of the high treatment-related mortality (24% in a randomised study comparing HDM/ASCT with oral melphalan/dexamethasone). We report here on the long-term outcome of all patients treated with HDM/ASCT for AL amyloidosis in Sweden between 1994 and 2009. Seventy-two patients were treated at eight Swedish centres. Median follow-up was 67.5 months. At least partial response (organ or haematological) was seen in 64% of the patients. Median overall survival was 98 months or 8.2 years, with 5-year survival 63.9% and 10-year survival 43.4%. In patients with cardiac involvement or multiple organ involvement, survival was significantly shorter, median overall survival 49 and 56 months, respectively. All mortality within 100 days from ASCT was 12.5% for all patients and 17.2% in the patients with cardiac involvement. For patients treated in the earlier time period (1994-2001), 100-day mortality was 23.8% compared with 7.8% in the later period (2002-2009). In conclusion, long survival times can be achieved in patients with AL amyloidosis treated with HDM/ASCT, also in smaller centres. Early mortality is high, but with a decreasing trend over time.

    Topics: Adult; Disease-Free Survival; Female; Follow-Up Studies; Heart Diseases; Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation; Humans; Immunoglobulin Light-chain Amyloidosis; Male; Melphalan; Middle Aged; Multiple Organ Failure; Survival Rate; Sweden; Time-to-Treatment; Transplantation, Autologous; Treatment Outcome

2016
Allogeneic hemopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT) for Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome: a report of the Spanish Working Party for Blood and Marrow Transplantation in Children (GETMON).
    Pediatric hematology and oncology, 2007, Volume: 24, Issue:6

    Allogeneic stem cell transplantation is the only curative treatment for Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome. The authors retrospectively analyzed the outcome with this procedure in 13 patients with severe Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome transplanted in 5 Spanish centers from 1989 to 2006. A patient was transplanted twice from the same donor due to a late engraftment failure. Age at transplant ranged from 7 to 192 months (median 30 months). There were 10 matched donors (3 related and 7 unrelated), 2 mismatched unrelated, and 1 haploidentical. Conditioning regimen consisted of busulfan and cyclophosphamide (BuCy) in 11 cases and fludarabine and melfalan (1) or BuCy (1). ATG was added in transplants from non-genetically matched donors. GvHD prophylaxis consisted of cyclosporine and methotrexate in most patients plus T-cell depletion in the haploidentical HSCT. Nine of the 13 transplanted patients are alive with complete clinical, immunologic, and hematologic recovery 8-204 months (median 101 months) after HSCT. Eight surviving patients had been transplanted from matched donors (3 related and 5 unrelated) and 1 from a haploidentical donor. Four patients died, 2 transplanted from matched donors (1 from acute GvHD and organ failure, 1 from a lymphoproliferative disorder after a second transplant), and 2 transplanted from mismatched unrelated donors (1 from acute GvHD and organ failure, 1 from graft failure and infection). Allogeneic hemopoietic stem cell transplantation must be utilized in all patients with severe Wisckott-Aldrich syndrome, using the most suitable graft variant for each patient.

    Topics: Antilymphocyte Serum; Busulfan; Child; Child, Preschool; Cyclophosphamide; Cyclosporine; Graft vs Host Disease; Haplotypes; Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation; Histocompatibility; HLA Antigens; Humans; Immunosuppressive Agents; Infant; Living Donors; Lymphocyte Depletion; Male; Melphalan; Multiple Organ Failure; Postoperative Complications; Reoperation; Retrospective Studies; Spain; T-Lymphocytes; Transplantation Conditioning; Transplantation, Homologous; Treatment Outcome; Vidarabine; Wiskott-Aldrich Syndrome

2007