Dennis A. Gastineau
Mayo Clinic
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Featured researches published by Dennis A. Gastineau.
Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 2009
Brendan Doyle; Charanjit S. Rihal; Dennis A. Gastineau; David R. Holmes
Advances in percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) during the past decade have led to more widespread use of these procedures in older and sicker patients. Refinement of periprocedural antithrombotic therapy has played a particularly important role in reducing ischemic complications to very low levels in routine practice. Although the use of more powerful antiplatelet agents has been associated with increased risk of bleeding (especially among the elderly and patients with serious comorbidities), such complications have traditionally been viewed as benign in nature. Recent studies, however, have identified major bleeding after PCI as an important predictor of increased mortality. Whether this relationship between bleeding and risk of death is cause-and-effect, or merely an association based on shared risk factors, remains unclear. In this review, we examine the basis for a possible causal link between post-PCI bleeding and subsequent mortality. Possible mechanisms underpinning such a link are discussed, including a potential adverse role for blood transfusion in this setting. A framework for further clinical evaluation of this issue is presented.
Leukemia | 2007
Shaji Kumar; A Dispenzieri; Martha Q. Lacy; S R Hayman; Francis Buadi; Dennis A. Gastineau; Litzow Mr; Rafael Fonseca; Vivek Roy; S V Rajkumar; Morie A. Gertz
While initial therapies have become highly effective with introduction of lenalidomide and bortezomib and patients may opt for delayed stem cell transplantation, it is important to collect stem cells for future transplant. Given its increasing use as initial therapy, we examined if lenalidomide had any impact on the ability to collect peripheral blood stem cells (PBSC). We studied the entire cohort of patients with myeloma undergoing PBSC mobilization at our institution during a 5-year period, comparing the results between patients receiving different initial therapies. Among those mobilized with granulocyte-colony stimulating factor (G-CSF) alone, there was a significant decrease in total CD34+ cells collected (P<0.001), average daily collection (P<0.001), day 1 collection (P<0.001) and increased number of aphereses (P=0.004) in patients treated with lenalidomide compared to those receiving dexamethasone, thalidomide-dexamethasone or VAD. A similar trend was seen in those mobilized with chemotherapy and G-CSF. A trend was seen towards decreased PBSC yield with increasing duration of lenalidomide therapy as well as increasing age (P=0.002). There was no effect on quality of PBSC collected based on similar engraftment across all groups. We recommend collection of PBSC within 6 months of initiation of therapy with lenalidomide containing regimens to minimize the risk of mobilization failures.
British Journal of Haematology | 1998
Angelo Palmas; Ayalew Tefferi; Jeffrey L. Myers; John P. Scott; Stephen J. Swensen; Michael G. Chen; Dennis A. Gastineau; Morie A. Gertz; David J. Inwards; Martha Q. Lacy; Mark R. Litzow
We examined the incidence and clinical outcome of late‐onset noninfectious pulmonary complications (LONIPC) in a series of 234 patients who underwent allogeneic bone marrow transplantation at our institution between April 1982 and October 1996. The 179 patients who survived 3 months or more were evaluated. Clinical, radiologic, pulmonary function, and pathologic tests were reviewed to identify 18 patients (10%) who fulfilled the diagnostic criteria of LONIPC. Accordingly, the pulmonary processes included bronchiolitis obliterans (BO, five patients), bronchiolitis obliterans with organizing pneumonia (BOOP, three patients), diffuse alveolar damage (DAD, one patient), lymphocytic interstitial pneumonia (LIP, one patient), and nonclassifiable interstitial pneumonia (NCIP, eight patients). Various methods of enhanced immunosuppressive therapy resulted in marked durable remission in nine patients (50%) (3/3 with BOOP, 3/8 with NCIP, 1/1 with DAD, 1/1 with LIP, 1/5 with BO). The presence of chronic graft‐versus‐host disease (cGVHD) and prophylaxis for GVHD with cyclosporine and prednisone were the only variables significantly associated with the development of LONIPC (P = 0.0001 and 0.008, respectively). Regardless of histology, a reduction in the forced expiratory volume to < 45% of the predicted range was associated with poor response to treatment. These findings suggest a strong association between cGVHD and LONIPC and that the risk of LONIPC development may be influenced by the particular method of GVHD prophylaxis. Most patients with BOOP or mild airflow limitation at diagnosis achieved durable remissions.
Laboratory Animals | 2011
Michael Deeds; Jarett M. Anderson; Adam Armstrong; Dennis A. Gastineau; H J Hiddinga; A Jahangir; Norman L. Eberhardt; Yogish C. Kudva
Streptozotocin (STZ)-induced diabetes mellitus (DM) offers a very cost-effective and expeditious technique that can be used in most strains of rodents, opening the field of DM research to an array of genotypic and phenotypic options that would otherwise be inaccessible. Despite widespread use of STZ in small animal models, the data available concerning drug preparation, dosing and administration, time to onset and severity of DM, and any resulting moribundity and mortality are often limited and inconsistent. Because of this, investigators inexperienced with STZ-induced diabetes may find it difficult to precisely design new studies with this potentially toxic chemical and account for the severity of DM it is capable of inducing. Until a better option becomes available, attempts need to be made to address shortcomings with current STZ-induced DM models. In this paper we review the literature and provide data from our pancreatic islet transplantation experiments using single high-dose STZ-induced DM in NCr athymic nude mice with hopes of providing clarification for study design, suggesting refinements to the process, and developing a more humane process of chemical diabetes induction.
Haematologica | 2007
Morie A. Gertz; Martha Q. Lacy; Angela Dispenzieri; Suzanne R. Hayman; Shaji Kumar; Nelson Leung; Dennis A. Gastineau
Our objective was to determine whether the goal of high-dose therapy should be a partial hematologic response or a complete response. We analyzed 282 consecutive stem cell transplant patients. A partial hematologic response was achieved in 108 patients (38%), and 93 (33%) achieved a complete hematologic response. Survival rates of patients with complete, partial, or no response were significantly different (p<0.001), even after eliminating bias from early death. The degree of response was affected by the intensity of chemotherapy conditioning, septal thickness, and cardiac biomarkers. Hematologic response translates to longer survival.
Mayo Clinic Proceedings | 2003
Michelle A. Elliott; William L. Nichols; Elizabeth A. Plumhoff; Stephen M. Ansell; Angela Dispenzieri; Dennis A. Gastineau; Morie A. Gertz; David J. Inwards; Martha Q. Lacy; Ivana N. Micallef; Ayalew Tefferi; Mark R. Litzow
OBJECTIVE To assess the activity of von Willebrand factor-cleaving protease (vWF-CP) in patients with thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura (TTP) complicating bone marrow transplantation (BMT) and peripheral blood stem cell transplantation (PBSCT). PATIENTS AND METHODS From March 1, 1999, to June 30, 2001, allogeneic and autologous hematopoietic stem cell transplantation was performed in 118 and 400 patients, respectively. We reviewed risk factors for development of posttransplantation TTP and measured vWF-CP activity during active TTP in 10 recipients. RESULTS The incidence of TTP after allogeneic and autologous transplantation was 6.8% (8/118) and 0.25% (1/400), respectively. Among the allogeneic transplant recipients, the incidence of TTP after nonmyeloablative (NMA) PBSCT, matched unrelated donor BMT, and sibling BMT or PBSCT was 15.4% (2/13), 11.8% (2/17), and 4.5% (4/88), respectively. Of the 10 patients with TTP, 9 (90%) had received extensive prior therapy, including autologous transplantation in both NMA recipients. Acute graft-vs-host disease (GVHD) prophylaxis consisted of cyclosporine and methotrexate in most affected patients. The vWF antigen level was elevated in all patients, and no patients showed evidence of vWF-CP deficiency. During active TTP, 6 patients had grade II-IV acute GVHD, 1 had extensive chronic GVHD, and 4 had cytomegalovirus viremia. Risk factor analysis for development of TTP showed that transplant type (NMA and matched unrelated donor) and source of stem cells (bone marrow vs peripheral blood stem cell) were significant. CONCLUSIONS Posttransplantation TTP was not found to be associated with severe vWF-CP deficiency. The elevated levels of vWF antigen are consistent with diffuse endothelial injury likely because of multiple interacting factors such as extensive prior therapy, GVHD, cyclosporine, and reactivation of cytomegalovirus. The disorder appears to be more frequent among patients with, or at risk for, acute GVHD, suggesting a possible role in the pathogenesis. Nonmyeloablative transplantation does not appear to confer a lesser risk, possibly for these reasons.
Neuro-oncology | 2010
Michael P. Gustafson; Yi Lin; Kent C. New; Peggy A. Bulur; Brian Patrick O'Neill; Dennis A. Gastineau; Allan B. Dietz
Patients with glioblastoma (GBM) exhibit profound systemic immune defects that affect the success of conventional and immune-based treatments. A better understanding of the contribution of the tumor and/or therapy on systemic immune suppression is necessary for improved therapies, to monitor negative effects of novel treatments, to improve patient outcomes, and to increase understanding of this complex system. To characterize the immune profile of GBM patients, we phenotyped peripheral blood and compared these to normal donors. In doing so, we identified changes in systemic immunity associated with both the tumor and dexamethasone treated tumor bearing patients. In particular, dexamethasone exacerbated tumor associated lymphopenia primarily in the T cell compartment. We have also identified unique tumor and dexamethasone dependent altered monocyte phenotypes. The major population of altered monocytes (CD14(+)HLA-DR(lo/neg)) had a phenotype distinct from classical myeloid suppressor cells. These cells inhibited T cell proliferation, were unable to fully differentiate into mature dendritic cells, were associated with dexamethasone-mediated changes in CCL2 levels, and could be re-created in vitro using tumor supernatants. We provide evidence that tumors express high levels of CCL2, can contain high numbers of CD14(+) cells, that tumor supernatants can transform CD14(+)HLA-DR(+) cells into CD14(+)HLA-DR(lo/neg) immune suppressors, and that dexamethasone reduces CCL2 in vitro and is correlated with reduction of CCL2 in vivo. Consequently, we have developed a model for tumor mediated systemic immune suppression via recruitment and transformation of CD14(+) cells.
Bone Marrow Transplantation | 2004
Morie A. Gertz; Martha Q. Lacy; A Dispenzieri; Stephen M. Ansell; Michelle A. Elliott; Dennis A. Gastineau; David J. Inwards; I. N. M. Micallef; Luis F. Porrata; Ayalew Tefferi; Litzow Mr
Summary:High-dose chemotherapy and autologous stem cell transplantation are used increasingly to treat patients with light-chain-related amyloidosis (AL). Treatment-related mortality is approximately 15%. To enable more patients to undergo stem cell transplantation, a risk-adapted strategy has been developed to treat with lower chemotherapy doses those patients who are at excessive risk. It is unclear whether reducing the chemotherapy dose in patients at excessive risk of treatment toxicity reduces the overall response. We retrospectively reviewed 171 AL patients who underwent conditioning chemotherapy with stem cell transplantation. The patients comprised two groups: those receiving standard high-dose melphalan and those receiving intermediate-dose melphalan. Responses were categorized as hematologic response, which used criteria for myeloma response. The two groups showed statistically significant differences; the overall response rates were 75% in the high-dose group and 53% in the intermediate-dose group although treatment-related mortality was the same in both groups. Reducing the melphalan dose appeared to render more AL patients eligible for stem cell transplantation but sacrificed an element of response. Methods are needed to reduce treatment-related toxicity so that more patients can receive full-dose conditioning chemotherapy.
Biology of Blood and Marrow Transplantation | 2008
Luis F. Porrata; David J. Inwards; Stephen M. Ansell; Ivana N. Micallef; Patrick B. Johnston; Dennis A. Gastineau; Mark R. Litzow; Jeffrey L. Winters; Svetomir N. Markovic
Day 15 absolute lymphocyte count (ALC-15) after autologous peripheral blood hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (APHSCT) has been reported to be a significant predictor for survival in multiple hematologic malignancies. Limitations of previous reports included their retrospective nature and the lack of ALC-15 lymphocyte subset analyses. To address these limitations, from February 2002 until February 2007, 50 non-Hodgkin lymphoma (NHL) patients were enrolled in a prospective study. The primary endpoint of the study was to confirm prospectively the ALC-15 survival role after APHSCT in NHL. The secondary endpoint was to identify the ALC-15 lymphocyte subset affecting survival after APHSCT. With a median follow-up of 22.2 months (range: 6-63.7 months), patients with an ALC-15 > or =500 cells/microL (n = 35) experienced superior overall survival (OS) and progression-free survival (PFS) compared with those who did not; median OS: not reached versus 5.4 months, 3-year OS rates of 80% (95% confidence interval [CI]: 55%-95%) versus 37% (95% CI: 15%-65%), P < .0001; and median PFS: not reached versus 3.3 months, 3-year PFS rates of 63% (95% CI: 40%-85%) versus 13% (95% CI: 4%-40%), P < .0001, respectively. Univariately, CD16+/56+/CD3- natural killer (NK) cells were the only ALC-15 lymphocyte subset identified as a predictor for survival. Patients with an NK cell count > or =80 cells/microL (n = 38) experienced superior OS and PFS compared with those who did not (median OS: not reached versus 5 months, 3-year OS rates of 76% [95% CI: 57%-92%] versus 36% [95% CI: 11%-62%], P < .0001; and median PFS: not reached versus 3 months, 3-year PFS rates of 57% [95% CI: 38%-85%] versus 9% [95% CI: 1%-41%], P < .0001, respectively). Multivariate analysis showed that NK cells are an independent predictor for survival. This is the first study confirming the ALC-15 survival role prospectively and identifying NK cells as the key ALC-15 lymphocyte subset affecting survival after APHSCT.
Bone Marrow Transplantation | 2000
Morie A. Gertz; Martha Q. Lacy; Dennis A. Gastineau; David J. Inwards; Michael G. Chen; Ayalew Tefferi; Robert A. Kyle; Litzow Mr
This study investigated the response rate and toxicity of blood cell transplantation as treatment for primary amyloidosis (AL). Twenty-three patients had stem cells collected between November 1995 and September 1998. Conditioning included melphalan and total body irradiation in 16 and melphalan alone in 4. Three patients did not undergo stem cell infusion because of poor performance status. Two died of progressive amyloid at 1 and 3 months. One patient is alive on hemodialysis. Fourteen males and six females (median age, 57 years) underwent transplantation. Renal, cardiac (by echocardiography), peripheral neuropathy or liver amyloidosis occurred in 14, 12, 3, and 1, respectively. Echocardiography demonstrated an interventricular septal thickness ⩾15 mm in six patients, five of whom died post transplantation. Three patients died of progressive amyloidosis at 7, 7, and 21 months. Thirteen patients are alive with a follow-up of 3 to 26 months. Twelve (60%) fulfilled the criteria of a hematologic or organ response. Severe gastrointestinal tract toxicity was seen in five (25%). We conclude that blood cell transplantation for amyloidosis had a much higher morbidity and mortality compared with transplantation for myeloma. The best results appear to occur in patients with nephrotic syndrome as the only manifestation of their disease. Bone Marrow Transplantation (2000) 26, 963–969.