Engraftment, clinical, and molecular follow-up of patients with multiple myeloma who were reinfused with highly purified CD34+ cells to support single or tandem high-dose chemotherapy
Open Access
- 1 April 2000
- journal article
- Published by American Society of Hematology in Blood
- Vol. 95 (7) , 2234-2239
- https://doi.org/10.1182/blood.v95.7.2234
Abstract
Eighty-two patients with advanced multiple myeloma (MM) were enrolled in 2 sequential clinical studies of 1 or 2 courses of myeloablative therapy with stem cell support. Conditioning regimens consisted of high-dose melphalan (MEL) with or without total body irradiation (TX1 = 35) and MEL as the first preparative regimen, followed within 6 months by busulfan and melphalan (TX2 = 47). On the basis of adequate stem cell harvest, 31 patients (TX1 = 13; TX2 = 18) were transplanted with highly purified CD34+ cells. Positively selected stem cells did not adversely affect hematopoietic reconstitution compared with unmanipulated peripheral blood stem cell. Overall, the complete remission (CR) rate of evaluative patients was 13.8% and 41% for single and double autotransplant, respectively (P = .04). Moreover, 3 patients undergoing TX2 achieved molecular remission and 2 remain PCR-negative after 36 and 24 months from autograft. The median event-free survival (EFS) durations for TX1 and TX2 were 17 and 35 months, respectively (P = .03). Actuarial 3-year overall survival for patients treated with 1 or 2 transplants are 76% and 92%, respectively (P = NS). On multivariate analysis, superior EFS was associated with low β2 microglobulin (β2-M) level at diagnosis and TX2, whereas overall survival was correlated with β2-M. Positive selection of CD34+ cells did not influence the achievement of clinical or molecular CR, as well as remission duration or survival of MM patients. Thus, whereas multiple cycles of high-dose therapy may be beneficial for patients with myeloma, the clinical impact of tumor cell purging remains highly questionable.Keywords
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