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Dive into the research topics where C. Dean Buckner is active.

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Featured researches published by C. Dean Buckner.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 1986

Methotrexate and Cyclosporine Compared with Cyclosporine Alone for Prophylaxis of Acute Graft versus Host Disease after Marrow Transplantation for Leukemia

Rainer Storb; H. Joachim Deeg; John Whitehead; Frederick R. Appelbaum; Patrick G. Beatty; William I. Bensinger; C. Dean Buckner; Clift Ra; Doney K; Farewell Vt; John A. Hansen; Roger Hill; Lawrence G. Lum; Paul Martin; Robert W. McGuffin; Jean E. Sanders; Patricia Stewart; Keith M. Sullivan; Robert P. Witherspoon; Gary Yee; E. Donnall Thomas

We treated 93 patients who had acute nonlymphoblastic leukemia in the first remission or chronic myelocytic leukemia in the chronic phase (median age, 30 years) with high-dose cyclophosphamide and fractionated total-body irradiation, followed by infusion of marrow from an HLA-identical sibling. To evaluate postgrafting prophylaxis for graft versus host disease, we studied these patients in a sequential, prospective, randomized trial that compared the effect of a combination of methotrexate and cyclosporine (n = 43) with that of cyclosporine alone (n = 50). All patients had evidence of sustained engraftment. A significant reduction in the cumulative incidence of grades II to IV acute graft versus host disease was observed in the patients who received both methotrexate and cyclosporine (33 percent), as compared with those who were given cyclosporine alone (54 percent) (P = 0.014). Seven patients who received cyclosporine alone acquired grade IV acute graft versus host disease, as compared with none who received both methotrexate and cyclosporine. Thirty-five of the 43 patients given both methotrexate and cyclosporine and 31 of the 50 patients given cyclosporine are alive as of this writing, at 4 months to 2 years (median, 15 months); the actuarial survival rates in the two groups at 1.5 years were 80 percent and 55 percent, respectively (P = 0.042). We conclude that the combination of methotrexate and cyclosporine is superior to cyclosporine alone in the prevention of acute graft versus host disease after marrow transplantation for leukemia, and that this therapy may have a beneficial effect on long-term survival.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 1989

Effect of HLA Compatibility on Engraftment of Bone Marrow Transplants in Patients with Leukemia or Lymphoma

Claudio Anasetti; Deborah Amos; Patrick G. Beatty; Frederick R. Appelbaum; William Bensinger; C. Dean Buckner; Clift Ra; Doney K; Paul J. Martin; Eric Mickelson; Brenda Nisperos; John O'quigley; Robert Ramberg; Jean E. Sanders; Patricia Stewart; Rainer Storb; Keith M. Sullivan; Robert P. Witherspoon; E. Donnall Thomas; John A. Hansen

We analyzed the relevance of HLA compatibility to sustained marrow engraftment in 269 patients with hematologic neoplasms who underwent bone marrow transplantations. Each patient received marrow from a family member who shared one HLA haplotype with the patient but differed to a variable degree for the HLA-A, B, and D antigens of the haplotype not shared. These 269 patients were compared with 930 patients who received marrow from siblings with identical HLA genotypes. All patients were treated with cyclophosphamide and total-body irradiation followed by the infusion of unmodified donor marrow cells. The rate of graft failure was 12.3 percent among the recipients of marrow from a donor with only one identical haplotype, as compared with 2.0 percent among recipients of marrow from a sibling with the same HLA genotype (both haplotypes inherited from the same parents) (P less than 0.0001). The incidence of graft failure correlated with the degree of donor HLA incompatibility. Graft failure occurred in 3 of 43 transplants (7 percent) from donors who were phenotypically HLA-matched with their recipient (haplotypes similar, but not inherited from the same parents), in 11 of 121 donors (9 percent) incompatible for one HLA locus, in 18 of 86 (21 percent) incompatible for two loci, and in 1 of 19 (5 percent) incompatible for three loci (P = 0.028). In a multivariate binary logistic regression analysis, independent risk factors associated with graft failure were donor incompatibility for HLA-B and D (relative risk = 2.1; 95 percent confidence interval, 1.7 to 2.5; P = 0.0004) and a positive crossmatch for anti-donor lymphocytotoxic antibody (relative risk = 2.3; 95 percent confidence interval, 1.8 to 2.8; P = 0.0038). Residual host lymphocytes were detected in 11 of 14 patients with graft failure, suggesting that the mechanism for graft failure could be host-mediated immune rejection. We conclude that donor HLA incompatibility and prior alloimmunization are significant risk factors for graft failure, and that a more effective immunosuppressive regimen than those currently used is needed for consistent achievement of sustained engraftment of marrow transplanted from donors who are not HLA-identical siblings.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 1991

Recombinant granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor after autologous bone marrow transplantation for lymphoid cancer

John Nemunaitis; Susan N. Rabinowe; Jack W. Singer; Philip J. Bierman; Julie M. Vose; Arnold S. Freedman; Nicole Onetto; Steven Gillis; Dagmar Oette; Morris Gold; C. Dean Buckner; John A. Hansen; Jerome Ritz; Frederick R. Appelbaum; James O. Armitage; Lee M. Nadler

Background. The period of neutropenia after autologous bone marrow transplantation results in substantial morbidity and mortality. The results of previous phase I-II clinical trials suggest that recombinant human granulocytemacrophage colony-stimulating factor (rhGM-CSF) may accelerate neutrophil recovery and thereby reduce complications in patients after autologous bone marrow transplantation. Methods. We conducted a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial at three institutions. The study design and treatment schedules were identical, and the results were pooled for analysis. One hundred twenty-eight patients were enrolled. Sixty-five patients received rhGM-CSF in a two-hour intravenous infusion daily for 21 days, starting within four hours of the marrow infusion, and 63 patients received placebo. Results. No toxic effects specifically ascribed to rhGM-CSF were observed. The patients given rhGM-CSF had a recovery of the neutrophil count to 500×106 per liter 7 days earlier than the patients who...


The New England Journal of Medicine | 1990

Immunomodulatory and Antimicrobial Efficacy of Intravenous Immunoglobulin in Bone Marrow Transplantation

Keith M. Sullivan; Kenneth J. Kopecky; Jane Jocom; Lyly Fisher; C. Dean Buckner; Joel D. Meyers; George W. Counts; Raleigh A. Bowden; Finn Bo Petersen; Robert P. Witherspoon; Miriam D. Budinger; Richard S. Schwartz; Frederick R. Appelbaum; Clift Ra; John A. Hansen; Jean E. Sanders; E. Donnall Thomas; Rainer Storb

BACKGROUND Graft-versus-host disease (GVHD) and infection are major complications of allogeneic bone marrow transplantation. Since intravenous immunoglobulin has shown benefit in several immunodeficiency and autoimmune disorders, we studied its antimicrobial and immunomodulatory role after marrow transplantation. METHODS In a randomized trial of 382 patients, transplant recipients given immunoglobulin (500 mg per kilogram of body weight weekly to day 90, then monthly to day 360 after transplantation) were compared with controls not given immunoglobulin. By chance, the immunoglobulin group included more patients with advanced-stage neoplasms; otherwise, the study groups were balanced for prognostic factors. RESULTS Control patients seronegative for cytomegalovirus who received seronegative blood products remained seronegative, but seronegative patients who received immunoglobulin and screened blood had a passive transfer of cytomegalovirus antibody (median titer, 1:64). Among the 61 seronegative patients who could be evaluated, none contracted interstitial pneumonia; among the 308 seropositive patients evaluated, 22 percent of control patients and 13 percent of immunoglobulin recipients had this complication (P = 0.021). Control patients had an increased risk of gram-negative septicemia (relative risk = 2.65, P = 0.0039) and local infection (relative risk = 1.36, P = 0.029) and received 51 more units of platelets than did immunoglobulin recipients. Neither survival nor the risk of relapse was altered by immunoglobulin. However, among patients greater than or equal to 20 years old, there was a reduction in the incidence of acute GVHD (51 percent in controls vs. 34 percent in immunoglobulin recipients; P = 0.0051) and a decrease in deaths due to transplant-related causes after transplantation of HLA-identical marrow (46 percent vs. 30 percent; P = 0.023). CONCLUSIONS Passive immunotherapy with intravenous immunoglobulin decreases the risk of acute GVHD, associated interstitial pneumonia, and infections after bone marrow transplantation.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 1989

Graft-versus-Host Disease as Adoptive Immunotherapy in Patients with Advanced Hematologic Neoplasms

Keith M. Sullivan; Rainer Storb; C. Dean Buckner; Alexander Fefer; Lloyd D. Fisher; Paul L. Weiden; Robert P. Witherspoon; Frederick R. Appelbaum; Meera Banaji; John A. Hansen; Paul J. Martin; Jean E. Sanders; Jack W. Singer; E. Donnall Thomas

The occurrence of graft-versus-host disease (GVHD) after allogeneic bone marrow transplantation for leukemia is thought to decrease the probability of recurrence. To study this effect (called adoptive immunotherapy) we modified the prophylaxis of GVHD in patients with advanced hematologic neoplasms (mostly leukemia) who received bone marrow transplants. Patients under 30 years of age were randomly assigned to one of three regimens of post-transplantation immunosuppression: Group I (n = 44) received a standard course of methotrexate for 102 days after transplantation, Group II (n = 40) received an abbreviated (11-day) course of methotrexate, and Group III (n = 25) received the standard course of methotrexate plus viable buffy-coat cells from the marrow donors. All 109 patients received cyclophosphamide (60 mg per kilogram of body weight on each of two days), total-body irradiation (2.25 Gy daily for seven days), and unmodified marrow from HLA-identical sibling donors. The frequency of GVHD of Grades II through IV was 25 percent in Group I, 59 percent in Group II, and 82 percent in Group III (P = 0.0001). The incidence of chronic GVHD, however, did not differ significantly among the groups (33, 51, and 44 percent, respectively), nor did the five-year probability of recurrence of disease (38, 45, and 33 percent, respectively). However, mortality from causes other than cancer was 34 percent in Group I, 45 percent in Group II, and 64 percent in Group III (I vs. III, P = 0.024); the deaths were due primarily to infections complicating the course of GVHD. With a median follow-up of 5.1 years (range, 3.9 to 7.4), disease-free survival was 41 percent in Group I, 30 percent in Group II, and 24 percent in Group III (the differences were not statistically significant). We conclude that abbreviating methotrexate prophylaxis or infusing donor buffy-coat cells increased the incidence of acute GVHD and related mortality without altering the incidence of chronic GVHD or the recurrence of malignant disease.


The Lancet | 1982

MARROW TRANSPLANTATION FOR THALASSAEMIA

E. Donnall Thomas; Jean E. Sanders; C. Dean Buckner; Thalia Papayannopoulou; Caterina Borgna-Pignatti; Piero De Stefano; ReginaldA Clift; KeithM. Sullivan; Rainer Storb

Abstract A 16-month-old boy with thalassaemia major was prepared with one dose of dimethyl busulphan, 5 mg/kg, and with cyclophosphamide, 50 mg/kg on 4 successive days, and given marrow from a 16-year-old HLA-identical normal sister. The graft was successful and the patient no longer has thalassaemia.


Transplantation | 1991

Marrow transplantation from HLA-matched unrelated donors for treatment of hematologic malignancies

Patrick G. Beatty; John A. Hansen; Gary Longton; E. Donnall Thomas; Jean E. Sanders; Paul J. Martin; Scott I. Bearman; Claudio Anasetti; Effie W. Petersdorf; Eric Mickelson; Margaret Sullivan Pepe; Appelbaum Fr; C. Dean Buckner; Clift Ra; Finn Bo Petersen; Patricia Stewart; Rainer Storb; Keith M. Sullivan; Michele C. Tesler; Robert P. Witherspoon

Less than 40% of the patients who could benefit from marrow transplantation have an HLA-matched relative who can serve as a donor. For this reason, several centers have explored marrow transplantation from other categories of donors. This retrospective study analyzes the results of marrow transplantation for 52 patients receiving grafts from HLA-A,B,DR,Dw-phenotypically matched, MLC-compatible, unrelated volunteer donors compared to a disease, disease-stage, and age-matched cohort of 104 patients transplanted from HLA-genotypically identical sibling donors. The patients transplanted from unrelated donors had an increased incidence of grade II-IV acute graft-versus-host disease compared to patients transplanted from related donors (79% vs. 36%, P much less than 0.001). However, the probability of relapse-free survival appears similar in the two groups (P = 0.39 over all, with estimates of 41% vs. 46% at 1 year). We conclude from this preliminary data that marrow transplantation from HLA-matched unrelated donors should be considered in most, if not all, circumstances where transplantation from an HLA-matched sibling would be indicated if such a donor were available.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 1980

Transplantation of Marrow from an Unrelated Donor to a Patient with Acute Leukemia

John A. Hansen; Clift Ra; E. Donnall Thomas; C. Dean Buckner; Rainer Storb; Eloise R. Giblett

MARROW transplantation between genotypically HLA-identical siblings has an established and expanding place in the management of leukemia and aplastic anemia.1 2 3 The majority of patients, unfortun...


Transplantation | 1982

Abo-incompatible marrow transplants

William I. Bensinger; C. Dean Buckner; E. Donnall Thomas; Clift Ra

We analyzed data from 81 ABO-incompatible marrow transplants performed between 1972 and 1980. Patients with high anti-red blood cell antibody levels pretrans-plant had a significantly increased probability of antibody return post-transplant. This was true for IgG and for IgM as independent variables. However, the return of antibody post-transplant had no effect on engraft-ment, survival, or blood product requirements post-transplant. Patients who received ABO-incompatible marrow had a similar time to engraftment, survival, and incidence of rejection and graft-versus-host disease as patients receiving ABO-compatible transplants. Neither pretransplant treatment regimen nor the development of graft-versus-host disease had an effect on post-transplant antibody levels. ABO-incompatible marrow transplants can be performed with no greater morbidity or mortality than ABO-compatible grafts. The procedures for antibody removal may be useful in other organ transplant settings.


International Journal of Radiation Oncology Biology Physics | 1984

Cataracts after total body irradiation and marrow transplantation: A sparing effect of dose fractionation

H. Joachim Deeg; Nancy Flournoy; Keith M. Sullivan; Karen Sheehan; C. Dean Buckner; Jean E. Sanders; Rainer Storb; Robert P. Witherspoon; E. Donnall Thomas

We examined 277 patients, who have been followed for 1 to 12 years after marrow transplantation, for cataract development. In preparation for transplantation, 96 patients with aplastic anemia were conditioned with chemotherapy only, usually cyclophosphamide 50 mg/kg X 4 intravenously, while 181 patients (two with aplastic anemia and 179 with a hematologic malignancy) were conditioned with a regimen of total body irradiation (TBI) and chemotherapy. TBI was delivered from two opposing 60Co sources at an exposure rate of 4 to 8 cGy/min, either as a single dose of 10 Gy (105 patients) or in fractions (76 patients), usually at increments of 2 to 2.25 Gy/day for 6 to 7 days for cumulative doses of 12 to 15.75 Gy. To date, 86 patients have developed cataracts. Kaplan-Meier product limit estimates of the incidence of cataracts for patients given chemotherapy only and no TBI, single-dose TBI, and fractionated TBI are 19, 80, and 18%, respectively. On the basis of proportional hazards regression analyses, patients given single-dose TBI had a relative risk of developing cataracts that was 4.7-fold higher than in patients given fractionated TBI or chemotherapy only (p less than 0.00005), suggesting a significant sparing effect with use of TBI dose fractionation. Addition significant risk factors included the chronic use of steroids posttransplant (highly associated with the presence of chronic graft-versus-host disease), and the diagnoses of acute lymphoblastic or chronic myelogenous leukemia.

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Rainer Storb

United States Public Health Service

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Clift Ra

Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center

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Jean E. Sanders

Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center

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Keith M. Sullivan

Louisiana State University in Shreveport

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Frederick R. Appelbaum

Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center

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