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Dive into the research topics where A. van der Does-van den Berg is active.

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Featured researches published by A. van der Does-van den Berg.


Leukemia | 2004

Significant difference in outcome for adolescents with acute lymphoblastic leukemia treated on pediatric vs adult protocols in the Netherlands

J M de Bont; B. van der Holt; A. W. Dekker; A. van der Does-van den Berg; Pieter Sonneveld; R. Pieters

Significant difference in outcome for adolescents with acute lymphoblastic leukemia treated on pediatric vs adult protocols in the Netherlands


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2003

Patient Stratification Based on Prednisolone-Vincristine-Asparaginase Resistance Profiles in Children With Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia

M L den Boer; D.O. Harms; R. Pieters; Karin M. Kazemier; U. Göbel; D. Körholz; Ulrike Graubner; R.J. Haas; Norbert Jorch; H.J. Spaar; G. J. L. Kaspers; Willem A. Kamps; A. van der Does-van den Berg; E. R. Van Wering; A. J. P. Veerman; G E Janka-Schaub

PURPOSE To confirm the prognostic value of a drug resistance profile combining prednisolone, vincristine, and l-asparaginase (PVA) cytotoxicity in an independent group of children with acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) treated with a different protocol and analyzed at longer follow-up compared with our previous study of patients treated according to the Dutch Childhood Leukemia Study Group (DCLSG) ALL VII/VIII protocol. PATIENTS AND METHODS Drug resistance profiles were determined in 202 children (aged 1 to 18 years) with newly diagnosed ALL who were treated according to the German Cooperative Study Group for Childhood Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia (COALL)-92 protocol. RESULTS At a median follow-up of 6.2 years (range, 4.1 to 9.3 years), the 5-year disease-free survival probability (pDFS) rate +/- SE was 69% +/- 7.0%, 83% +/- 4.4%, and 84% +/- 6.8% for patients with resistant (PVA score 7 to 9), intermediate-sensitive (PVA score 5 to 6), and sensitive (SPVA score 3 to 4) profiles, respectively (sensitive and intermediate-sensitive v resistant, P </=.05). Resistant patients were at increased risk of an early event (nonresponse or relapse within 2.5 years of diagnosis) compared with sensitive and intermediate-sensitive patients (P =.03). The profile did not identify patients at higher risk of late relapse, which was also observed for DCLSG ALL-VII/VIII patients now analyzed at a median of 7.5 years of follow-up (range, 4.4 to 10.8 years). Despite being nondiscriminative for late relapses, the resistant profile was still the strongest prognostic factor for COALL-92 patients in a multivariate analysis including known risk factors (P =.07). CONCLUSION Drug resistance profiles identify patients at higher risk of early treatment failures and may, therefore, be used to improve risk-group stratification of children with ALL.


Leukemia | 2002

BFM-oriented treatment for children with acute lymphoblastic leukemia without cranial irradiation and treatment reduction for standard risk patients: results of DCLSG protocol ALL-8 (1991-1996).

Willem A. Kamps; J.P.M. Bökkerink; F.G.A.J. Hakvoort-Cammel; A. J. P. Veerman; R.S. Weening; E. R. Van Wering; J.F. van Weerden; Jo Hermans; Rosalyn Slater; E. van den Berg; Wg Kroes; A. van der Does-van den Berg

Modern treatment strategies, consisting of intensive chemotherapy and cranial irradiation, have remarkably improved the prognosis for children with acute lymphoblastic leukemia. However, patients with a potential for cure are at risk of severe acute and late adverse effects of treatment. Furthermore, in 25–30% of patients treatment still fails. The objectives of the DCLSG study ALL 8 were to decrease the toxicity and to increase the effectivity of BFM-oriented treatment. Decrease of toxicity was aimed at by confirmation of the results of the previous DCLSG study ALL-7, showing that the majority (94%) of children with ALL can succesfully be treated with BFM-oriented therapy without cranial irradiation, and by reduction of treatment for standard risk (SRG) patients. To increase the cure rate in medium risk (MRG) patients the efficacy of high doses of intravenous 6-mercaptopurine (HD-6MP) during protocol M and in SRG patients the efficacy of high doses of L-asparaginase (HD-L-ASP) during maintenance treatment was studied in randomized studies. Patient stratification and treatment were identical to protocol ALL-BFM90, with the following differences: no prophylactic cranial irradiation, SRG patients received only phase 1 of protocol I. Four hundred and sixty-seven patients entered the protocol: 170 SRG, 241 MRG and 56 HRG patients. The 5 years event-free survival rate for all patients was 73% (s.e. 2%); for SRG, MRG and HRG patients 85% (s.e. 3%), 73% (s.e. 3%) and 39% (s.e. 7%), respectively. In patients >1 year of age at diagnosis unfavorable prognostic factors were male sex, >25% blasts in the bone marrow at day 15 and initial white blood cell count (WBC) >50 × 109/l. The cumulative risk of CNS relapse rate was 5% (s.e. 1%) at 5 years. These results confirm that the omission of cranial irradiation in BFM-oriented treatment does not jeopardize the overall good treatment results, nor does early reduction of chemotherapy in SRG patients. No benefit was observed from treatment intensification with HD-L-ASP in SRG patients, nor from HD-6MP in MRG patients.


Leukemia | 2005

Causes of death - other than progressive leukemia - in childhood acute lymphoblastic (ALL) and myeloid leukemia (AML): the Dutch Childhood Oncology Group experience

Am Slats; R M Egeler; A. van der Does-van den Berg; Carin M. Korbijn; K. Hählen; Willem A. Kamps; A. J. P. Veerman; Christian M. Zwaan

We analyzed causes of death, other than resistant disease or relapse, in 875 children with acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) and 229 with acute myeloid leukemia (AML), treated on three different Dutch Childhood Oncology Group (DCOG) ALL and three AML protocols. Overall, 23 (2.6%) ALL and 44 (19.2%) AML patients died. Early death (ED, before remission was reached) occurred in nine ALL (1%) and thirty AML (13.1.%) patients, including three and ten deaths before treatment was initiated. Chemotherapy-related mortality in remission (CRM) occurred in nine ALL (1.1%) and eight AML (4.4%) patients. For ALL, both ED and CRM declined over time, although this was not statistically significant. For AML a decrease in ED was observed (from 26% to approximately 10%), but counter-balanced by an increase in CRM (from 3 to 8%), maybe related to the scheduling of intensification blocks in AML-92/94. Including transplant-related mortality, death in CR rates in AML increased from 3 to 15% in the last study. The main cause of ED was hemorrhage, often associated with hyperleucocytosis, and infection for CRM. We conclude that mortality dropped favorably in ALL, but not in AML. Especially for AML, effective but less toxic therapy and better supportive care guidelines need to be developed.


Leukemia | 2000

Long-term follow-up of Dutch Childhood Leukemia Study Group (DCLSG) protocols for children with acute lymphoblastic leukemia, 1984-1991

Willem A. Kamps; Ajp Veerman; E. R. Van Wering; J.F. van Weerden; Rosalyn Slater; A. van der Does-van den Berg

Here we report the long-term results of the DCLSG protocols ALL-6 and -7 with special emphasis on the incidence of CNS relapse after treatment without cranial irradiation. In DCLSG protocol ALL-6 (1984–1988), designed for patients with ALL non-high risk (ALL-NHR) (WBC <50 × 109/l, no mediastinal mass, no B cell phenotype and no CNS involvement at diagnosis, comprising 71% of all ALL patients), CNS prophylaxis consisted of a combination of three methods of chemotherapeutic CNS prophylaxis (the use of dexamethasone during induction and maintenance therapy, i.v. medium dose methotrexate and prolonged administration of intrathecal triple therapy). Total duration of treatment: 116 weeks. 190 patients were enrolled in the study. At 10 years, the EFS rate for all patients is 81.5 ± 2.8%, the survival rate 84.8 ± 2.7%, and the cumulative incidence of isolated CNS relapse 1.1 ± 0.8%. The 10-year survival rate for the 139/190 (73.1%) patients with standard risk non-T lineage ALL according to the NCI risk criteria is 80.5 ± 3.4%. DCLSG protocol-7 was identical to the intensive ALL-BFM-86 protocol, but cranial irradiation was restricted to patients with initial CNS involvement. Patients were stratified into three risk groups (SRG, RG and EG). Treatment duration was 18 months. 218 patients were enrolled in the study. At 10 years, the EFS rate for all patients is 63.4 ± 3.3%, the survival rate 76.4 ± 3.0%, the 5-year cumulative incidence of isolated CNS relapse 5.7 ± 1.8%. The EFS rate at 10 years of the 127/218 (58.3%) patients with standard risk non-T-lineage ALL according to the NCI risk criteria was 67.9 ± 4.3%, which is not significantly different from the results achieved in this category of patients with the moderately intensive treatment according to protocol ALL-6 (logrank P = 0.17). These DCLSG studies indicate that omission of cranial irradiation does not jeopardize the overall good results.


Leukemia | 1999

Bcl-2 family members in childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia: relationships with features at presentation, in vitro and in vivo drug response and long-term clinical outcome

G. S. Salomons; L. A. Smets; M. Verwijs-Janssen; A. A. M. Hart; E. G. Haarman; G. J. L. Kaspers; E. R. Van Wering; A. van der Does-van den Berg; Willem A. Kamps

We have found that, in addition to Bcl-2 and Bax, the expression levels of apoptosis inducers (Bad, Bak) and inhibitors (Bcl-xL, Mcl-1) were highly variable in blasts from 78 children with newly diagnosed acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL). The patients were enrolled in the national study ALL-7 of the Dutch Childhood Leukemia Study Group. In contrast to Bcl-2 that inversely correlated with %S-phase cells and WBC, and was lower in T than in B-lineage ALL, the Bcl-2 family members were not found to be associated with features at presentation. These expression levels were also compared with drug resistance in in vitro MTT (methyl-thiazol-tetrazolium) assays for prednisolone, vincristine and asparaginase in 46 children. Protein expression levels of the Bcl-2 family were not found to correlate with in vitroresistance to the individual drugs or the combined drug resistance profile. In addition, neither peripheral blast reduction after 1 week of prednisone monotherapy nor long-term disease-free interval or survival showed a correlation with protein expression. Our results indicate that the anti-proliferative function of Bcl-2 dominates its anti-apoptotic function in ALL, but neither Bcl-2 nor the Bcl-2 family members gained prognostic information in the risk-adapted protocol ALL-7.


Leukemia | 2001

Extramedullary infiltrates at diagnosis have no prognostic significance in children with acute myeloid leukaemia.

Mm Bisschop; Tom Révész; Marc Bierings; J.F. van Weerden; E. R. Van Wering; K. Hählen; A. van der Does-van den Berg

This retrospective study was designed to review the relative frequency and prognostic significance of extramedullary infiltrates in children with acute myeloid leukaemia (AML). The registration data and initial discharge summaries were reviewed for all children diagnosed with AML, and registered by the Dutch Childhood Leukaemia Study Group (DCLSG). Between 1972 and 1998, 477 children were diagnosed with AML. Of these patients, 120 (25.1%) had extramedullary leukaemia (EML) at diagnosis. Four categories of EML were found: skin, soft tissue or bone, gingival infiltration and central nervous system (CNS) involvement. Patients who presented with gingival infiltrates, were older than those without EML or those in the other EML subgroups, had a high initial WBC count and a high proportion of M4/M5 morphological variants. This type of presentation could indicate a special biological entity. Univariate analysis of prognostic factors in patients treated after 1985 with intensive protocols showed that initial WBC count and the presence of favourable cytogenetic findings were significant. The presence of EML at diagnosis had no significant effect on event-free survival. In a stepwise multiple regression analysis only favourable cytogenetic findings remained significant.


Leukemia | 2001

T(7;12)(q36;p13) and t(7;12)(q32;p13) - Translocations involving ETV6 in children 18 months of age or younger with myeloid disorders

Rosalyn Slater; Ellen van Drunen; Wg Kroes; Daniël Olde Weghuis; E. van den Berg; Em Smit; A. van der Does-van den Berg; E. R. Van Wering; K. Hählen; Aj Carroll; Sc Raimondi; H B Beverloo

Our retrospective karyotype review revealed two rare recurrent translocations affecting ETV6 (TEL): t(7;12)(q36;p13) and t(7;12)(q32;p13). Five patients with a t(7;12) were from a group of 125 successfully karyotyped pediatric patients enrolled in consecutive clinical AML trials of the Dutch Childhood Leukemia Study Group over a period of 7 years. During a search of available cytogenetic databases, we found 7q and 12p abnormalities in two additional Dutch patients and in three participants in Pediatric Oncology Group trials. A del(12p) had been initially identified in four of these patients and re-examination of the original karyograms revealed a t(7;12)(q36;p13) in two instances and a probable t(7;12) in the other two. FISH confirmed the presence of a t(7;12)(q36;p13) in the latter. Most (n = 7) also had trisomy 19. The t(7;12)(q36;p13) (n = 9) was more common than the t(7;12)(q32;p13) (n = 1). These subtle translocations were found only in children 18 months of age or younger. A literature search revealed that the t(7;12) with breakpoints at 7q31-q36 and 12p12-p13 had been reported in six children with myeloid disorders and in two with acute lymphoblastic leukemia; all were 12 months of age or younger. Only two of the 17 for whom survival data were available, were alive after at least 22 months of continuous complete remission. Our findings suggest that ETV6rearrangements due to a t(7;12) may play an adverse role in myeloid disorders in children 18 months of age or younger. Therefore, children in this age group with myeloid disorders should be screened for both MLL and ETV6 rearrangements.


Leukemia | 2005

Treatment strategy and results in children treated on three Dutch Childhood Oncology Group acute myeloid leukemia trials.

Gabriela Kardos; Christian M. Zwaan; G. J. L. Kaspers; S S N de-Graaf; E. S. J. M. de Bont; Albert Postma; J.P.M. Bökkerink; R S Weening; A. van der Does-van den Berg; E. R. Van Wering; Carin M. Korbijn; K. Hählen

This report describes the long-term follow-up data of three consecutive Dutch Childhood Oncology Group acute myeloid leukemia (AML) protocols. A total of 303 children were diagnosed with AML, of whom 209 were eligible for this report. The first study was the AML-82 protocol. Results were inferior (5-year probability of overall survival (pOS) 31%) to other available regimes. Study AML-87 was based on the BFM-87 protocol, with prophylactic cranial irradiation in high-risk patients only, and without maintenance therapy. This led to a higher cumulative incidence of relapse than that reported by the Berlin–Frankfurt–Münster (BFM), but survival was similar (5-year pOS 47%), suggesting successful retrieval at relapse. The subsequent study AML-92/94 consisted of a modified BFM-93 protocol, that is, without maintenance therapy and prophylactic cranial irradiation. However, all patients were to be transplanted (auto- or allogeneic), although compliance was poor. Antileukemic efficacy was offset by an increase in the cumulative incidence of nonrelapse mortality, especially in remission patients, and survival did not improve (5-year pOS 44%). Our results demonstrate that outcome in childhood AML is still unsatisfactory, and that further intensification of therapy carries the risk of enhanced toxicity. Our patients are currently included in the MRC AML studies, based on the results of their AML 10 trial.


European Journal of Cancer | 1996

Small influence of parental educational level on the survival of children with leukaemia in the Netherlands between 1973 and 1979

J.W.W. Coebergh; A. van der Does-van den Berg; Wim C. J. Hop; F. van Weerden; J.A. Rammeloo; H.A. van Steensel; E. R. Van Wering; Willem A. Kamps

We studied the effect of parental educational level (PEL), an indicator of socio-economic status (SES), on survival of children with acute lymphoblastic (ALL) and non-lymphoblastic leukaemia (ANLL). All children with ALL and ANLL diagnosed in The Netherlands in the period 1973-1979, registered by the Dutch Childhood Leukaemia Study Group and followed until 1991 were included. Bone marrow and blood smears had been uniformly classified in a central laboratory; cases with acute lymphoblastic leukaemia (ALL) were subdivided into standard risk (SR) and high risk (HR). PEL, assessed as a risk indicator in a separately conducted population-based case-control study of the same children (response rate: 88%), was divided into low, when neither of the parents had more than elementary school or lower vocational education, and high when either had more. Children with SR ALL of high PEL parents had a slightly higher 10-year survival rate than of low PEL parents (58% versus 54%, P = 0.25), whereas survival for the latter increased more (P = 0.06) from a lower level in the period 1973-1975. However, children of low PEL parents with HR ALL and ANLL had a higher 10-year survival rate compared with children of high PEL parents (P = 0.10 and 0.22, respectively). Children without information on PEL, non-responders, migrants and with missing values exhibited slightly worse survival rates. The influence of PEL on survival of acute leukaemia in children in The Netherlands during 1973-1979 appeared small or even equivocal. Small differences in SES and optimal geographic and financial access to care, delivered through national treatment protocols, may be responsible for these results.

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Dive into the A. van der Does-van den Berg's collaboration.

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E. R. Van Wering

Boston Children's Hospital

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A. J. P. Veerman

VU University Medical Center

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K. Hählen

Erasmus University Rotterdam

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R. Pieters

VU University Medical Center

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Willem A. Kamps

University Medical Center Groningen

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G. J. L. Kaspers

VU University Medical Center

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Rosalyn Slater

Erasmus University Rotterdam

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Sibrand Poppema

University Medical Center Groningen

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J.P.M. Bökkerink

Radboud University Nijmegen

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