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Dive into the research topics where Bhuvan Kishore is active.

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Featured researches published by Bhuvan Kishore.


Leukemia | 2015

Arsenic trioxide-based therapy of relapsed acute promyelocytic leukemia: registry results from the European LeukemiaNet

Eva Lengfelder; Francesco Lo-Coco; Lionel Ades; P. Montesinos; David Grimwade; Bhuvan Kishore; Safaa M. Ramadan; Maria Pagoni; Massimo Breccia; A. J G Huerta; A. M. Nloga; J. D. González-Sanmiguel; Anne Schmidt; Jean-Francois Lambert; S. Lehmann; E Di Bona; B. Cassinat; Wolf-Karsten Hofmann; Dennis Görlich; Maria Cristina Sauerland; Pierre Fenaux; Miguel A. Sanz

In 2008, a European registry of relapsed acute promyelocytic leukemia was established by the European LeukemiaNet. Outcome data were available for 155 patients treated with arsenic trioxide in first relapse. In hematological relapse (n=104), 91% of the patients entered complete hematological remission (CR), 7% had induction death and 2% resistance, 27% developed differentiation syndrome and 39% leukocytosis, whereas no death or side effects occurred in patients treated in molecular relapse (n=40). The rate of molecular (m)CR was 74% in hematological and 62% in molecular relapse (P=0.3). All patients with extramedullary relapse (n=11) entered clinical and mCR. After 3.2 years median follow-up, the 3-year overall survival (OS) and cumulative incidence of second relapse were 68% and 41% in hematological relapse, 66% and 48% in molecular relapse and 90 and 11% in extramedullary relapse, respectively. After allogeneic or autologous transplantation in second CR (n=93), the 3-year OS was 80% compared with 59% without transplantation (n=55) (P=0.03). Multivariable analysis demonstrated the favorable prognostic impact of first remission duration ⩾1.5 years, achievement of mCR and allogeneic or autologous transplantation on OS of patients alive after induction (P=0.03, P=0.01, P=0.01) and on leukemia-free survival (P=0.006, P<0.0001, P=0.003), respectively.


The Lancet Haematology | 2016

Bortezomib, thalidomide, dexamethasone, and panobinostat for patients with relapsed multiple myeloma (MUK-six): a multicentre, open-label, phase 1/2 trial

Rakesh Popat; Sarah Brown; Louise Flanagan; Andrew Hall; Walter Gregory; Bhuvan Kishore; Matthew Streetly; Heather Oakervee; Kwee Yong; Gordon Cook; Eric Low; Jamie Cavenagh

BACKGROUNDnPanobinostat (a pan histone deacetylase inhibitor) is approved in combination with bortezomib and dexamethasone for patients with relapsed multiple myeloma who have received two or more previous lines of therapy. We aimed to improve the safety of this combination and investigate efficacy by incorporating low-dose thalidomide, using sub-cutaneous weekly bortezomib, and determining the maximum tolerated dose of panobinostat in this regimen.nnnMETHODSnWe did a phase 1/2, multicentre, open-label trial (MUK six) at four hospitals in the UK, enrolling patients with relapsed, or relapsed and refractory, multiple myeloma aged at least 18 years, with an Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group performance status of 2 or less who had previously received 1-4 lines of therapy. Exclusion criteria included any antimyeloma treatment within 28 days of study drugs (except dexamethasone 160 mg >48 h before treatment). We used a rolling six escalation design to determine the maximum tolerated dose of panobinostat, and allocated patients to receive subcutaneous bortezomib 1·3 mg/m2, and oral thalidomide 100 mg, dexamethasone 20 mg, and panobinostat 10, 15, or 20 mg (escalated to 20 mg according to the escalation schedule). Treatment was given during a 21-day cycle (bortezomib on days 1 and 8; thalidomide every day; dexamethasone on days 1, 2, 8, and 9; and panobinostat on days 1, 3, 5, 8, 10, and 12) for 16 cycles in the absence of disease progression or unacceptable toxicity. Patients were permitted to come off study for autologous stem cell transplantation. The primary objective was to determine the maximum tolerated dose and recommended dose of panobinostat, and to estimate the proportion of patients with an overall response that was equal to a partial response or greater within 16 cycles of treatment at the recommended panobinostat dose in the modified intention-to-treat population. We assessed safety in all patients who received a trial drug (ie, bortezomib, thalidomide, dexamethasone, or panobinostat). This trial is registered at ClinicalTrials.gov, number NCT02145715, and with the ISRCTN registry, number ISRCTN59395590 and is closed to recruitment.nnnFINDINGSnBetween Jan 31, 2013, and Oct 30, 2014, we enrolled 57 eligible patients who received at least one dose of trial medication or any drug. One dose-limiting toxicity was reported (grade 3 hyponatremia at the 20 mg dose), therefore the maximum tolerated dose was not reached, and 20 mg was deemed to be the recommended dose. 46 patients were treated with panobinostat 20 mg (the intention-to-treat population). 42 patients (91%, 80% CI 83·4-96·2) of 46 achieved the primary endpoint of an overall response that was equal to a partial response or greater. Most adverse events were grade 1-2 with few occurrences of grade 3-4 diarrhoea or fatigue. The most common adverse events of grade 3 or worse in the safety population (n=57) were reduced neutrophil count (15 [26%]), hypophosphatemia (11 [19%]), and decreased platelet count (8 [14%]). 46 serious adverse events were reported in 27 patients; of 14 suspected to be related to the trial medication, seven (50%) were gastrointestinal disorders.nnnINTERPRETATIONnPanobinostat 20 mg in combination with bortezomib, thalidomide, and dexamethasone is an efficacious and well tolerated regimen for patients with relapsed multiple myeloma.nnnFUNDINGnNovartis and Myeloma UK.


Blood Cancer Journal | 2016

Second malignancies in the context of lenalidomide treatment: an analysis of 2732 myeloma patients enrolled to the Myeloma XI trial.

John R Jones; David A. Cairns; Walter Gregory; Corinne Collett; Charlotte Pawlyn; Rachel Sigsworth; Alina Striha; R Henderson; Martin Kaiser; Matthew W. Jenner; Graham P. Cook; Nigel H. Russell; Catherine Williams; Guy Pratt; Bhuvan Kishore; Jindriska Lindsay; Mark T. Drayson; Faith E. Davies; Kevin Boyd; Roger G. Owen; Graham Jackson; Gareth J. Morgan

We have carried out the largest randomised trial to date of newly diagnosed myeloma patients, in which lenalidomide has been used as an induction and maintenance treatment option and here report its impact on second primary malignancy (SPM) incidence and pathology. After review, 104 SPMs were confirmed in 96 of 2732 trial patients. The cumulative incidence of SPM was 0.7% (95% confidence interval (CI) 0.4–1.0%), 2.3% (95% CI 1.6–2.7%) and 3.8% (95% CI 2.9–4.6%) at 1, 2 and 3 years, respectively. Patients receiving maintenance lenalidomide had a significantly higher SPM incidence overall (P=0.011). Age is a risk factor with the highest SPM incidence observed in transplant non-eligible patients aged >74 years receiving lenalidomide maintenance. The 3-year cumulative incidence in this group was 17.3% (95% CI 8.2–26.4%), compared with 6.5% (95% CI 0.2–12.9%) in observation only patients (P=0.049). There was a low overall incidence of haematological SPM (0.5%). The higher SPM incidence in patients receiving lenalidomide maintenance therapy, especially in advanced age, warrants ongoing monitoring although the benefit on survival is likely to outweigh risk.


Hematology Reviews | 2014

Reduced Intensity Allogeneic Stem Cell Transplant for Treatment of Blastic Plasmacytoid Dendritic Cell Neoplasm

Anand Lokare; Emmanouil Nikolousis; Neil Phillips; Zbigniew Rudzki; Richard Lovell; Bhuvan Kishore; Donald Milligan; Shankara Paneesha

Blastic plasmacytoid dendritic cell neoplasm is a rare, aggressive tumor characterized by skin and/or marrow infiltration by CD4+ CD56+ cells. Historically, the tumor was variably thought to arise from either monocytes, T cells or NK cells giving rise to terms such as CD4+/CD56+ acute monoblastic leukemia, primary cutaneous CD4+/CD56+ hematodermic tumor and blastic NK-cell lymphoma. Whilst considerable progress has been made in understanding the histogenesis, the best modality of treatment remains to be defined. We are therefore reporting this case which was successfully treated with a T-deplete allogeneic transplant and the patient is currently alive and in remission 4 years post transplant.


British Journal of Haematology | 2018

Extended follow-up and the feasibility of Panobinostat maintenance for patients with Relapsed Multiple Myeloma treated with Bortezomib, Thalidomide, Dexamethasone plus Panobinostat (MUK six open label, multi-centre phase I/II Clinical Trial).

Rakesh Popat; Sarah Brown; Louise Flanagan; Andrew Hall; Walter Gregory; Bhuvan Kishore; Matthew Streetly; Heather Oakervee; Kwee Yong; Gordon Cook; Eric Low; Jamie Cavenagh

Long-term results of adjuvant donor lymphocyte transfusion in AML after allogeneic stem cell transplantation. Bone Marrow Transplantation, 51, 663–667. Legrand, F., Le Floch, A.-C., Granata, A., F€ urst, S., Faucher, C., Lemarie, C., Harbi, S., Bramanti, S., Calmels, B., El-Cheikh, J., Chabannon, C., Weiller, P.-J., Vey, N., Castagna, L., Blaise, D. & Devillier, R. (2017) Prophylactic donor lymphocyte infusion after allogeneic stem cell transplantation for high-risk AML. Bone Marrow Transplantation, 52, 620–621. Scarisbrick, J.J., Dignan, F.L., Tulpule, S., Gupta, E.D., Kolade, S., Shaw, B., Evison, F., Shah, G., Tholouli, E., Mufti, G., Pagliuca, A., Malladi, R. & Raj, K. (2015) A multicentre UK study of GVHD following DLI: rates of GVHD are high but mortality from GVHD is infrequent. Bone Marrow Transplantation, 50, 62–67. Zeidan, A.M., Forde, P.M., Symons, H., Chen, A., Smith, B.D., Pratz, K., Carraway, H., Gladstone, D.E., Fuchs, E.J., Luznik, L., Jones, R.J. & Bola~ nos-Meade, J. (2014) HLA-haploidentical donor lymphocyte infusions for patients with relapsed hematologic malignancies after related HLA-haploidentical bone marrow transplantation. Biology of Blood and Marrow Transplantation: Journal of the American Society for Blood and Marrow Transplantation, 20, 314–318.


Haematologica | 2017

Myelodysplasia and liver disease extend the spectrum of RTEL1 related telomeropathies

Shirleny Cardoso; Alicia Ellison; Amanda J. Walne; David Cassiman; Manoj Raghavan; Bhuvan Kishore; Philip Ancliff; Carmen Rodríguez-Vigil; Bieke Dobbels; Ana Rio-Machin; Ahad Al Seraihi; Nikolas Pontikos; Hemanth Tummala; Tom Vulliamy; Inderjeet Dokal

Regulator of telomere elongation helicase 1 (RTEL1) is a DNA helicase involved in telomere maintenance.[1][1],[2][2] Germline biallelic RTEL1 variants have been previously reported in a subset of patients with dyskeratosis congenita (DC) and its severe variant Hoyeraal-Hreidarsson syndrome (HH).[3][


European Journal of Haematology | 2017

Reduced intensity conditioning allogeneic transplantation after salvage treatment with DT-PACE in myeloma patients relapsing early after autologous transplant

Kate Randall; Maria Kaparou; Evgenia Xenou; Shankara Paneesha; Bhuvan Kishore; Alexandros Kanellopoulos; Richard Lovell; Kathy Holder; Julie Suhr; Lynda Baker; Lynn Ryan; Emmanouil Nikolousis

In this retrospective single‐centre study, we have looked into the transplant outcomes(overall survival OS, progression‐free survival PFS, GvHD) and the role of chimerism, DLI and pretransplant characteristics in patients who had a suboptimal response (<12 months) to an autologous stem cell transplant for myeloma and underwent an alemtuzumab T‐cell depleted reduced‐intensity allograft(RIC).


Blood | 2016

Lenalidomide Is a Highly Effective Maintenance Therapy in Myeloma Patients of All Ages; Results of the Phase III Myeloma XI Study

Graham Jackson; Faith E. Davies; Charlotte Pawlyn; David A. Cairns; Alina Striha; Corinne Collett; Anna Waterhouse; John R Jones; Bhuvan Kishore; Mamta Garg; Cathy Williams; Kamaraj Karunanithi; Jindriska Lindsay; Matthew W. Jenner; Gordon Cook; Martin Kaiser; Mark T. Drayson; Roger G. Owen; Nigel H. Russell; Walter Gregory; Gareth J. Morgan


Blood | 2016

Response Adapted Induction Treatment Improves Outcomes for Myeloma Patients; Results of the Phase III Myeloma XI Study

Graham Jackson; Faith E. Davies; Charlotte Pawlyn; David A. Cairns; Alina Striha; Corinne Collett; Anna Waterhouse; John R Jones; Bhuvan Kishore; Mamta Garg; Cathy Williams; Kamaraj Karunanithi; Jindriska Lindsay; Matthew W. Jenner; Gordon Cook; Martin Kaiser; Mark T. Drayson; Roger G. Owen; Nigel H. Russell; Walter Gregory; Gareth J. Morgan


Blood | 2010

Treatment of Molecular and Clinical Relapse of Acute Promyelocytic Leukemia (APL) with Arsenic Trioxide: Results of the European Registry of Relapsed APL

Eva Lengfelder; Francesco Lo-Coco; Pau Montesinos; David Grimwade; Lionel Ades; Bhuvan Kishore; Maria Pagoni; Safaa M. Ramadan; Massimo Breccia; Alexandra Holowiecka; Anne Pradel; Maria Cristina Sauerland; Pierre Fenaux; Miguel A. Sanz

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Emmanouil Nikolousis

Heart of England NHS Foundation Trust

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Richard Lovell

University of Birmingham

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Shankaranarayana Paneesha

Heart of England NHS Foundation Trust

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Charlotte Pawlyn

Institute of Cancer Research

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Jindriska Lindsay

East Kent Hospitals University Nhs Foundation Trust

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John R Jones

Institute of Cancer Research

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