Anna Pawlowska
City of Hope National Medical Center
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Publication
Featured researches published by Anna Pawlowska.
Pediatric Blood & Cancer | 2011
Joseph Rosenthal; Anna Pawlowska; E. Bolotin; Cheryl Cervantes; Sean Maroongroge; Sandra H. Thomas; Stephen J. Forman
Transplant‐associated thrombotic microangiopathy (TMA) syndromes are reported to occur with increased frequency in transplant patients treated with siroliumus combined with a calcineurin inhibitor. We performed a retrospective study of all pediatric transplant patients at City of Hope who were administered combined tacrolimus/sirolimus (TAC/SIR) to determine the occurrence of TMA.
Pediatric Blood & Cancer | 2011
Joseph Rosenthal; Ann E. Woolfrey; Anna Pawlowska; Sandra H. Thomas; Frederick R. Appelbaum; Stephen J. Forman
The controversy surrounding private banking of umbilical cord blood units (CBU), as a safeguard against future malignancy or other life‐threatening conditions, raises many questions in pediatric clinical practice. Recent favorable experiences with autologous transplantation for severe aplastic anemia using privately stored CBU, suggested a possible utility. While private banking is difficult to justify statistically or empirically, there may exist rare cases where autologous transplant of stored umbilical CBU could be beneficial. The reality of privately banked CBU and the possibility for future discovery of additional indications for autologous cord blood transplant, motivated us to re‐examine our attitudes towards private cord blood banking. Pediatr Blood Cancer 2011;56:1009–1012.
Biology of Blood and Marrow Transplantation | 2017
Anthony S. Stein; Joycelynne Palmer; Ni-Chun Tsai; Monzr M. Al Malki; Ibrahim Aldoss; Haris Ali; Ahmed Aribi; Len Farol; Chatchada Karanes; Samer K. Khaled; An Liu; Margaret R. O'Donnell; Pablo Parker; Anna Pawlowska; Vinod Pullarkat; Eric H. Radany; Joseph Rosenthal; Firoozeh Sahebi; Amandeep Salhotra; James F. Sanchez; Tim Schultheiss; Ricardo Spielberger; Sandra H. Thomas; David S. Snyder; Ryotaro Nakamura; Guido Marcucci; Stephen J. Forman; Jeffrey Y.C. Wong
Current conditioning regimens provide insufficient disease control in relapsed/refractory acute leukemia patients undergoing hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT) with active disease. Intensification of chemotherapy and/or total body irradiation (TBI) is not feasible because of excessive toxicity. Total marrow and lymphoid irradiation (TMLI) allows for precise delivery and increased intensity treatment via sculpting radiation to sites with high disease burden or high risk for disease involvement, while sparing normal tissue. We conducted a phase I trial in 51 patients (age range, 16 to 57 years) with relapsed/refractory acute leukemia undergoing HSCT (matched related, matched unrelated, or 1-allele mismatched unrelated) with active disease, combining escalating doses of TMLI (range, 1200 to 2000 cGy) with cyclophosphamide (CY) and etoposide (VP16). The maximum tolerated dose was declared at 2000 cGy, as TMLI simulation studies indicated that >2000 cGy might deliver doses toxic for normal organs at or exceeding those delivered by standard TBI. The post-transplantation nonrelapse mortality (NRM) rate was only 3.9% (95% confidence interval [CI], .7 to 12.0) at day +100 and 8.1% (95% CI, 2.5 to 18.0) at 1 year. The cumulative incidence of grades II to IV acute graft-versus-host disease (GVHD) was 43.1% (95% CI, 29.2 to 56.3) and for grade III and IV, it was 13.7% (95% CI, 6.9 to 27.3). The day +30 complete remission rate for all patients was 88% and was 100% for those treated at 2000 cGy. The overall 1-year survival was 55.5% (95% CI, 40.7 to 68.1). The TMLI/CY/VP16 conditioning regimen is well tolerated at TMLI doses up to 2000 cGy with a low 100-day and 1-year NRM rate and no increased risk of GVHD with higher doses of radiation.
The American Journal of Surgical Pathology | 2013
Young Kim; Huiqing Wu; Anna Pawlowska; Marnelli A. Bautista-Quach; Qin Huang; Karl Gaal; Karen L. Chang
Mast cell sarcoma (MCS) is an extremely rare neoplasm with a clinically aggressive course. Because of its rarity, its morphologic and molecular characteristics are still not well defined. We report a case of a 15-year-old girl with MCS of the temporal bone extending into the posterior fossa creating a mass effect. The lesion mimicked a histiocytic neoplasm morphologically, but showed a novel KIT missense mutation, L799F (2395 C>T). The KIT D816V mutation is frequently found in systemic mastocytosis, but it has not been documented in the few reported human MCS cases. However, 1 reported case of MCS has shown a different alteration in the KIT gene. Our case is the first MCS case with L799F mutation, located between the catalytic loop (790 to 797) and the activation loop (810 to 837) of the KIT gene, and only the second case of MCS with KIT mutation documented in the literature. Proximity of the L799F mutation to the enzymatic region of the KIT tyrosine kinase domain may induce resistance to tyrosine kinase inhibitors.
Expert Review of Anticancer Therapy | 2011
Joseph Rosenthal; Anna Pawlowska
The prognosis for high-risk Ewing’s tumors has been improved by multimodal radiation and chemotherapy. Ewing’s family of tumors requires risk-adapted treatment. Risk stratification is dependent on stage, tumor localization and volume, and the pattern of disease spread at the time of diagnosis and the time of relapse. The concepts for high-dose therapy followed by hematopoietic cell transplantation in Ewing’s family of tumors are based on dose–response and dose–intensity relationships. This article will discuss the use of high-dose therapy followed by hematopoietic cell transplantation, focusing on recent progress with respect to agent combinations, dose and outcomes of therapy.
Biology of Blood and Marrow Transplantation | 2018
Anna Pawlowska; J. Cheng; Nicole Karras; Weili Sun; Leo D. Wang; Alison D. Bell; Lisa Gutierrez; Joseph Rosenthal
Allogeneic stem cell transplantation (HCT) is curative in patients with severe sickle cell disease (SCD), but a significant number of patients lack an HLA-identical sibling or matched unrelated donor. Mismatched related (haploidentical) HCT with post-transplant cyclophosphamide (PTCY) allows expansion of the donor pool but is complicated by high rates of graft failure. In this report we describe a favorable haploidentical HCT approach in a limited cohort of SCD patients with significant comorbidities. To reduce the risk of graft failure we administered the conditioning regimen of rabbit antithymocyte globulin, busulfan, and fludarabine preceded with 2 courses of pretransplant immunosuppressive therapy (PTIS) with fludarabine and dexamethasone. Graft-versus-host disease (GVHD) prophylaxis consisted of PTCY on days +3 and +4 followed by tacrolimus and mycophenolate mofetil starting on day +5. Four patients (ages 13, 19, 19, and 23 years) received T cell-replete haploidentical stem cell infusion. All patients engrafted with 99.9% to 100% donor chimerism, and all patients continued with stable engraftment at the last follow-up (5 to 11 months post-transplant). Time to neutrophil engraftment was 14 to 26 days. Two patients had high levels of donor-specific anti-HLA antibodies, which required the implementation of an antibody management protocol. This facilitated neutrophil engraftment on day +16 and day +26, respectively. One patient developed grade I acute GVHD, which resolved. Three patients developed mild, limited skin GVHD that responded to conventional immunosuppressive therapy. Human herpesvirus-6 viremia was detected in 3 patients but resolved without treatment. One patient developed asymptomatic cytomegalovirus viremia that responded appropriately to standard therapy with ganciclovir. The prompt, stable engraftment and low toxicity in the post-transplant period makes PTIS with haploidentical transplant a promising option for patients with SCD.
Blood | 2001
Anna Pawlowska; Satoshi Hashino; Hilary J. McKenna; Brenda Weigel; Patricia A. Taylor; Bruce R. Blazar
Journal of Hematology & Oncology | 2018
Weili Sun; Huaying Liu; Young Kim; Nicole Karras; Anna Pawlowska; Debbie Toomey; Wade Kyono; Paul S. Gaynon; Joseph Rosenthal; Anthony S. Stein
Biology of Blood and Marrow Transplantation | 2018
Geoff D.E. Cuvelier; Eneida R. Nemecek; Justin T. Wahlstrom; Andrew C. Harris; Michael A. Pulsipher; Victor Lewis; Henrique Bittencourt; Sung Won Choi; Carrie L. Kitko; Emi Caywood; Monica Bhatia; Kmberly Kasow; David A. Jacobsohn; Benjamin R. Oshrine; Albert Kheradpour; Sonali Chaudhury; Joseph H. Chewning; Tal Schechter; Allyson Flower; Don W. Coulter; Michael Joyce; Süreyya Savaşan; Anna Pawlowska; Gail Megason; David Mitchell; Alexandra Cheerva; Amina Kariminia; Anat Halevy; Kirk R. Schultz
Biology of Blood and Marrow Transplantation | 2018
Anna Pawlowska; Nicole Karras; Liu Huaying; Julie DiMundo; J. Cheng; Weili Sun; Saro H. Armenian; Sanjeet Dadwal; Dongyun Yang; Joycelynne Palmer; Bernard Tegtmeier; Joseph Rosenthal