Cecilia Oswald
Boston Children's Hospital
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Publication
Featured researches published by Cecilia Oswald.
British Journal of Haematology | 2005
Simone Cesaro; Rosi Oneto; Chiara Messina; Brenda Gibson; Agnès Buzyn; Colin G. Steward; Eliane Gluckman; Robbert Breddius; Marc Boogaerts; Christiane Vermylen; Paul Veys; J. C. W. Marsh; Isabel Badell; Gérard Michel; Tayfun Güngör; Dietrich Niethammer; Pierre Bordigoni; Cecilia Oswald; Claudio Favre; Jakob Passweg; Giorgio Dini
This report assessed the results of allogeneic stem cell transplantation (allo‐SCT) in 26 patients with Shwachman–Diamond disease (SDS) and severe bone marrow abnormalities. The conditioning regimen was based on busulphan (54%), total body irradiation (23%), fludarabine (15%) or other chemotherapy combinations (8%). Standard prevention of graft versus host disease (GVHD) with ciclosporin ± methotrexate was adopted in 54% of the patients whilst in vivo or in vitro T‐cell depletion was used in 17 and four patients respectively. Neutrophil and platelet engraftment were achieved in 21 (81%) and 17 (65%) of 26 patients after a median time of 18 days and 29 days respectively. The incidence of grade III and IV acute GVHD was 24% and of chronic GVHD 29%. Nine patients died after a median time of 70 d, post‐SCT. After a median follow‐up of 1·1 years, the transplant‐related mortality was 35·5% (95% CI 17–54) whilst the overall survival was 64·5% (95% CI 45·7–83·2). Allo‐SCT was found to be successful in more than half of SDS patients with severe bone marrow dysfunction. Further improvements would be anticipated by a better definition of the optimum time in the course of disease to transplant and by the adoption of less toxic conditioning regimens.
Pediatric Blood & Cancer | 2013
Marion K. Mateos; Tracey O'Brien; Cecilia Oswald; Melissa Gabriel; David S. Ziegler; Richard J. Cohn; Susan Russell; Draga Barbaric; Glenn M. Marshall; Toby Trahair
Over the last 25 years, donor source, conditioning, graft‐versus‐host disease prevention and supportive care for children undergoing hematopoeitic stem cell transplantation (HSCT) have changed dramatically. HSCT indications for acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) now include high‐risk patients in first and subsequent remission. There is a large burden of infectious and pre‐HSCT morbidities, due to myelosuppressive therapy required for remission induction. We hypothesized that, despite these trends, overall survival (OS) had increased.
Bone Marrow Transplantation | 2009
T.E. Petterson; Melissa Gabriel; Karin Tiedemann; Lochie Teague; Peter J. Shaw; D. Baker; R. Bolton-Jones; Heather Tapp; Cecilia Oswald; Marcus Vowels; Tracey O'Brien
Unrelated umbilical cord blood (UCB) is an alternative stem cell source for paediatric patients lacking a matched related or unrelated marrow donor. We report the results of all paediatric unrelated UCB transplants performed in Australia and New Zealand over a 10-year period. A total of 135 patients were transplanted, 100 for malignant disease (74%) and 35 for non-malignant disorders. The majority (88%) of patients received an HLA-mismatched graft. The median infused total nucleated cell dose was 4.7 × 107/kg and CD34+ count 1.9 × 105/kg. Neutrophil engraftment occurred in 83% of patients by day 42 (median 23 days) and platelet engraftment in 55% by day 60 (median 56 days). Grades II–IV and III–IV acute GVHD occurred in 41 and 18% of patients, respectively. TRM and overall survival 1-year post transplant were 32 and 61%, respectively. A higher probability of neutrophil recovery (P=0.004) and faster time to recovery (median 18 days vs 26 days, P=0.008) were observed in recipients of a cord unit with a CD34 cell dose ⩾1.7 × 105/kg. Our results support selection of cord units with CD34 cell doses ⩾1.7 × 105/kg to promote faster engraftment, improve survival and lower TRM.
Neuro-oncology | 2006
David S. Ziegler; Richard J. Cohn; Geoffrey McCowage; Frank Alvaro; Cecilia Oswald; Robert Mrongovius; Les White
The objective of this study was to assess the efficacy of the VETOPEC regimen, a regimen of vincristine and etoposide with escalating doses of cyclophosphamide (CPA), in pediatric patients with high-risk brain tumors. Three consecutive studies by the Australia and New Zealand Childrens Cancer Study Group--VETOPEC I, Baby Brain 91, and VETOPEC II--have used a specific chemotherapy regimen of vincristine (VCR), etoposide (VP-16) and escalating CPA in patients with relapsed, refractory, or high-risk solid tumors. Patients in the VETOPEC II cohort were treated with very high dose CPA with peripheral blood stem cell (PBSC) rescue. We analyzed the subset of patients with high-risk brain tumors treated with these intensive VETOPEC-based protocols to assess the response, toxicity, and survival. We also assessed whether the use of very high dose chemotherapy with stem cell rescue improved the response rate or affected toxicity. Seventy-one brain tumor patients were treated with VETOPEC-based protocols. Of the 54 patients evaluable for tumor response, 17 had a complete response (CR) and 20 a partial response (PR) to treatment, which yielded an overall response rate of 69%. The CR + PR was 83% (19/23) for medulloblastomas, 56% (5/9) for primitive neuroectodermal tumors, 55% (6/11) for grade 3 and 4 astrocytomas, and 80% (6/8) for ependymomas. At a median follow-up of 36 months, overall survival for the entire cohort of 71 patients was 32%, with event-free survival of 13%. There were no toxic deaths within the PBSC-supported VETOPEC II cohort, despite higher CPA doses, compared with 7% among the non-PBSC patients. This regimen produces high response rates in a variety of very poor prognosis pediatric brain tumors. The maximum tolerated dose of CPA was not reached. Higher escalation in doses of CPA did not deliver a further improvement in response. With PBSC rescue in the VETOPEC II study, hematologic toxicity was no longer a limiting factor. The response rates observed support further development of this chemotherapy regimen.
Pediatric Blood & Cancer | 2011
Geoffrey McCowage; Robert Mrongovius; Frank Alvaro; Richard J. Cohn; David S. Ziegler; Cecilia Oswald; Les White
Children with solid tumors deemed to be poor risk at diagnosis and those who fail to respond or recur after chemotherapy have adverse outcomes. We sought to increase the dosage of cyclophosphamide (CPA) in the VETOPEC regimen (vincristine, etoposide, and CPA) with a view to improving the response rate and survival.
Blood | 2002
Tracey O'Brien; Susan Russell; Marcus Vowels; Cecilia Oswald; Karin Tiedemann; Peter J. Shaw; Liane Lockwood; Lochie Teague; Michael Rice; Glenn M. Marshall
Biology of Blood and Marrow Transplantation | 2016
Claire M. Vajdic; Eleni Mayson; Anthony J. Dodds; Tracey O'Brien; Leonie Wilcox; Ian Nivison-Smith; Renate Le Marsney; Benjamin Daniels; Lesley J. Ashton; L. Ashton; R. Le Marsney; A. Dodds; Jeff Tan; Ian Bilmon; L. Wilcox; I. Nivison-Smith; D. Aarons; Steven Tran; C. Vajdic; John Gibson; Anne Maree Johnston; Matthew Greenwood; M. Forbes; Mark Hertzberg; Gillian Huang; Andrew Spencer; Jenny Muirhead; Jeff Szer; Kate Mason; Ian D. Lewis
Biology of Blood and Marrow Transplantation | 2006
T.E. Petterson; Karin Tiedemann; Lochie Teague; Peter J. Shaw; D. Baker; R. Bolton-Jones; Cecilia Oswald; Tracey A. O’Brien
Journal of Pediatric Hematology Oncology | 2018
Aditi Vedi; Richard Mitchell; Sunita Shanmuganathan; Cecilia Oswald; Glenn M. Marshall; Toby Trahair; Siva Sivarajasingam; David S. Ziegler
Biology of Blood and Marrow Transplantation | 2018
Laura Chapman; Kim Falato; Cecilia Oswald; Richard Mitchell; Tracey O'Brien