Chuanfa Guo
University of Maryland, Baltimore
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Publication
Featured researches published by Chuanfa Guo.
Nature Medicine | 2005
Aaron P. Rapoport; Edward A. Stadtmauer; Nicole A. Aqui; Ashraf Badros; Julio Cotte; Lisa Chrisley; Elizabeth Veloso; Zhaohui Zheng; Sandra Westphal; Rebecca Mair; Nina Chi; Bashi Ratterree; Mary Francis Pochran; Sabrina Natt; Joanne Hinkle; Cheryl Sickles; Ambika Sohal; Kathleen Ruehle; Christian Lynch; Lei Zhang; David L. Porter; Selina M. Luger; Chuanfa Guo; Hong-Bin Fang; William C. Blackwelder; Kim Hankey; Dean L. Mann; Robert Edelman; Carl E. Frasch; Bruce L. Levine
Immunodeficiency is a barrier to successful vaccination in individuals with cancer and chronic infection. We performed a randomized phase 1/2 study in lymphopenic individuals after high-dose chemotherapy and autologous hematopoietic stem cell transplantation for myeloma. Combination immunotherapy consisting of a single early post-transplant infusion of in vivo vaccine-primed and ex vivo costimulated autologous T cells followed by post-transplant booster immunizations improved the severe immunodeficiency associated with high-dose chemotherapy and led to the induction of clinically relevant immunity in adults within a month after transplantation. Immune assays showed accelerated restoration of CD4 T-cell numbers and function. Early T-cell infusions also resulted in significantly improved T-cell proliferation in response to antigens that were not contained in the vaccine, as assessed by responses to staphylococcal enterotoxin B and cytomegalovirus antigens (P < 0.05). In the setting of lymphopenia, combined vaccine therapy and adoptive T-cell transfer fosters the development of enhanced memory T-cell responses.
Transfusion | 2002
Ashraf Badros; Guido Tricot; Amir A. Toor; Christopher J. Morris; Chuanfa Guo; Nikhil C. Munshi; Bart Barlogie; Michele Cottler-Fox
BACKGROUND: Blood group incompatibility does not appear to affect the overall outcome in patients undergoing myeloablative conditioning before allogeneic BMT. Data on ABO‐mismatched transplantation in the nonmyeloablative setting are limited.
Leukemia Research | 2003
Javier Bolaños-Meade; Judith E. Karp; Chuanfa Guo; Clarence Sarkodee-Adoo; Aaron P. Rapoport; Michael L. Tidwell; Laxmi N Buddharaju; T.Timothy Chen
Clinical outcome in acute myeloid leukemia (AML) is unsatisfactory. One strategy to augment cytotoxicity is TST. All-trans retinoic acid (ATRA) down-regulates bcl-2 expression and heightens AML sensitivity to cytosine arabinoside (ara-C)-induced apoptosis in vitro. We designed a trial of ATRA plus ara-C-based TST in an attempt to enhance drug-induced apoptosis and clinical outcome. Between January 1998 and February 2000, 63 patients received induction TST (oral ATRA days 1-6, ara-C and idarubicin days 2-4, VP-16 days 9-11) followed by consolidation TST (ATRA, ara-C and idarubicin followed by a second ara-C infusion days 11-13). Complete remission (CR) was 60%, with higher rates for patients of <60 years (79%), de novo AML (70%), and non-adverse cytogenetics (81%). Median disease-free survival (DFS) for CR patients was 11.2 months (32% at 3+ years). For patients <60 years with de novo AML and non-adverse cytogenetics who underwent two-cycle TST, DFS was 67% at 3+ years. However, patients of age equal to 60 years and those with poor-risk disease features still have poor CR and DFS, despite the addition of ATRA.
Bone Marrow Transplantation | 2004
I Gojo; Chuanfa Guo; C Sarkodee-Adoo; Barry Meisenberg; A Fassas; Aaron P. Rapoport; Michele Cottler-Fox; Meyer R. Heyman; N Takebe; G Tricot
Summary:The purpose of the study was to examine the yield of CD34+ cells, response rates, and toxicity of high-dose cyclophosphamide with or without etoposide in patients with multiple myeloma. In total, 77 myeloma patients received either cyclophosphamide 4.5 g/m2 (n=28) alone or with etoposide 2 g/m2 (n=49) in a nonrandomized manner, followed by G-CSF 10 μg/kg/day for the purpose of stem cell mobilization. The effects of various factors on CD34+ cell yield, response rate and engraftment were explored. A median of 22.39 × 106 CD34+ cells/kg were collected on the first day of leukapheresis (range 0.59–114.71 × 106/kg) in 71 (92%) of patients. Greater marrow plasma cell infiltration (P=0.02) or prior radiation therapy (P=0.02) adversely affected CD34+ cell yield. In total, 45% of patients receiving cyclophosphamide and 56% of those receiving cyclophosphamide/etoposide had at least a minimum response by EBMT criteria. In all, 25% of patients who received cyclophosphamide alone vs 75.5% of patients who received combined chemotherapy required hospitalization mainly for treatment of neutropenic fever. Cyclophosphamide alone is associated with impressive CD34+ cell yields and clear antimyeloma activity. The addition of etoposide resulted in increased toxicity without significant improvement in CD34+ cell yield or response rates.
Bone Marrow Transplantation | 2003
Clarence Sarkodee-Adoo; I Taran; Chuanfa Guo; F Buadi; R Murthy; E Cox; R Lopez; Sandra Westphal; S Shope; B O'Connell; L Wethers; Barry Meisenberg
Summary:We evaluated 120 leukapheresis procedures (93 patients), in order to detect clinical factors that influence the efficiency of CD34+ collection using Cobe Spectra™ cell separators. Hematocrit was >27% and platelet count >30 000/μl in >95% of patients. Platelet transfusions were given if the postprocedure count was <20 000/μl. Multiple regression analysis was used to analyze putative factors, and a predictive equation defined by stepwise regression modeling. The mean efficiency was 0.59 (s.d. 0.27). Sex (M>F; P=0.01), the volume processed (inver-sely; P=0.01) and CD34+ cell count (inversely; P=0.04) were associated with efficiency, whereas hematocrit, platelet or leukocyte count, catheter type and patient weight were not. The effect size for predictive factors was small (R2=0.21). Adverse events were limited to hypocalcemia. We conclude that female sex, volume processed and CD34+ cell count adversely influence the efficiency of CD34+ cell leukapheresis. However, the impact of volume and CD34+ cell count is small, and likely to be offset by the influence of these same factors on overall yield. Leukapheresis appears to be safe and efficient for autologous blood and marrow transplantation patients with hematocrit >27% and platelet count >30 000/μl.
Bone Marrow Transplantation | 2004
Aaron P. Rapoport; Chuanfa Guo; Ashraf Badros; R Hakimian; Gorgun Akpek; E Kiggundu; Barry Meisenberg; H Mannuel; Naoko Takebe; Robert G. Fenton; Javier Bolaños-Meade; Meyer R. Heyman; Ivana Gojo; Kathleen Ruehle; Sabrina Natt; Bashi Ratterree; T Withers; Clarence Sarkodee-Adoo; G Phillips; Guido Tricot
Summary:Relapse remains a major cause of treatment failure after autotransplantation (auto-PBSCT) for Hodgkins disease (HD). The administration of non-crossresistant therapies during the post-transplant period may delay or prevent relapse. We prospectively studied the role of consolidation chemotherapy (CC) after auto-PBSCT in 37 patients with relapsed or refractory HD. Patients received high-dose gemcitabine–BCNU–melphalan and auto-PBSCT followed by involved-field radiation and up to four cycles of the DCEP-G regimen, which consisted of dexamethasone, cyclophosphamide, etoposide, cisplatin, gemcitabine given at 3 and 9 months post transplant alternating with a second regimen (DPP) of dexamethasone, cisplatin, paclitaxel at 6 and 12 months post transplant. The probabilities of event-free survival (EFS) and overall survival (OS) at 2.5 years were 59% (95% CI=42–76%) and 86% (95% CI=71–99%), respectively. In all, 17 patients received 54 courses of CC and 15 were surviving event free (2.5 years, EFS=87%). There were no treatment-related deaths during or after the CC phase. Post-transplant CC is feasible and well tolerated. The impact of this approach on EFS should be evaluated in a larger, randomized study.
Bone Marrow Transplantation | 2006
I Gojo; Barry Meisenberg; Chuanfa Guo; A Fassas; A. Murthy; R Fenton; N Takebe; Melvin B. Heyman; G L Philips; Michele Cottler-Fox; C Sarkodee-Adoo; Kathleen Ruehle; T French; M Tan; Guido Tricot; Aaron P. Rapoport
Although high-dose therapy and autologous stem cell transplant (ASCT) is superior to conventional chemotherapy for treatment of myeloma, most patients relapse and the time to relapse depends upon the initial prognostic factors. The administration of non-cross-resistant chemotherapies during the post-transplant period may delay or prevent relapse. We prospectively studied the role of consolidation chemotherapy (CC) after single autologous peripheral blood stem cell transplant (auto-PBSCT) in 103 mostly newly diagnosed myeloma patients (67 patients were ⩽6 months from the initial treatment). Patients received conditioning with BCNU, melphalan±gemcitabine and auto-PBSCT followed by two cycles of the DCEP±G regimen (dexamethasone, cyclophosphamide, etoposide, cisplatin±gemcitabine) at 3 and 9 months post-transplant and alternating with two cycles of DPP regimen (dexamethasone, cisplatin, paclitaxel) at 6 and 12 months post-transplant. With a median follow-up of 61.2 months, the median event-free survival (EFS) and overall survival (OS) are 26 and 54.1 months, respectively. The 5-year EFS and OS are 23.1 and 42.5%, respectively. Overall, 51 (49.5%) patients finished all CC, suggesting that a major limitation of this approach is an inability to deliver all planned treatments. In order to improve results following autotransplantation, novel agents or immunologic approaches should be studied in the post-transplant setting.
Leukemia Research | 2004
Javier Bolaños-Meade; Chuanfa Guo; Ivana Gojo; Judith E. Karp
Blood | 2004
Aaron P. Rapoport; Edward A. Stadtmauer; Bruce L. Levine; Ashraf Badros; Gorgun Akpek; Julio Cotte; Lisa Chrisley; Elizabeth Veloso; Sandra Westphal; Zhaohui Zheng; Rebecca Mair; Nina Chi; Bashi Ratterree; Sabrina Natt; Joanne Hinkle; David L. Porter; Selina Luger; Kathleen Ruehle; Chuanfa Guo; Dean L. Mann; Alan S. Cross; Carl H. June
Biology of Blood and Marrow Transplantation | 2004
Aaron P. Rapoport; Edward A. Stadtmauer; Bruce L. Levine; Ashraf Badros; Gorgun Akpek; Julio Cotte; Lisa Chrisley; E. Veloso; Sandra Westphal; Z. Zheng; K. Grandfield; Bashi Ratterree; Sabrina Natt; Joanne Hinkle; David L. Porter; Selina M. Luger; Kathleen Ruehle; B. George; Chuanfa Guo; Dean L. Mann; Alan Cross; Carl H. June
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University of Maryland Marlene and Stewart Greenebaum Cancer Center
View shared research outputsUniversity of Maryland Marlene and Stewart Greenebaum Cancer Center
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