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Dive into the research topics where Francisco José Ortuño is active.

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Featured researches published by Francisco José Ortuño.


Haematologica | 2009

A high number of losses in 13q14 chromosome band is associated with a worse outcome and biological differences in patients with B-cell chronic lymphoid leukemia

José Ángel Hernández; Ana Eugenia Rodríguez; Marcos González; Rocío Benito; Celia Fontanillo; Virgilio Sandoval; Mercedes Romero; Guillermo Martín-Núñez; Alfonso García de Coca; Rosa Fisac; Josefina Galende; Isabel Recio; Francisco José Ortuño; Juan L. García; Javier De Las Rivas; Norma C. Gutiérrez; Jesús F. San Miguel; Jesús Hernández

In B-cell chronic lymphoid leukemia, patients with 13q14 deletion generally have a favorable outcome. The findings of this study suggest that the number of malignant cells with 13q14 deletion may influence the outcome of patients with this cytogenetic abnormality as a single chromosomal aberration. A high number of malignant cells carrying the 13q14 deletion, as assessed by FISH, appears to be associated with short overall survival and time to progression. Background Among patients with B-cell chronic lymphoid leukemia, those with 13q14 deletion have a favorable outcome. However, whether the percentage of cells with 13q- influences the prognosis or the biological characteristics of this disease is unknown. We analyzed the clinico-biological characteristics and outcome of patients with B-cell chronic lymphoid leukemia with loss of 13q as the sole cytogenetic aberration. Design and Methods Three hundred and fifty patients with B-cell chronic lymphoid leukemia were studied. Clinical data were collected and fluorescence in situ hybridization and molecular studies were carried out. In addition, a gene expression profile was obtained by microarray-based analysis. Results In 109 out of the 350 cases (31.1%) loss of 13q was the sole cytogenetic aberration at diagnosis. In the subgroup of patients with 80% or more of cells with loss of 13q (18 cases), the overall survival was 56 months compared with not reached in the 91 cases in whom less than 80% of cells had loss of 13q (p< 0.0001). The variables included in the multivariate analysis for overall survival were the percentage of losses of 13q14 (p=0.001) and B symptoms (p=0.007). The time to first therapy in the group with 80% or more vs. less than 80% of losses was 38 months vs. 87 months, respectively (p=0.05). In the multivariate analysis the variables selected were unmutated status of IgVH (p=0.001) and a high level of β2microglobulin (p=0.003). Interestingly, these differences regarding overall survival and time to first therapy were also present when other cut-offs were considered. The gene expression profile of patients with a high number of losses in 13q14 showed a high proliferation rate, downregulation of apoptosis-related genes, and dysregulation of genes related to mitochondrial functions. Conclusions Patients with B-cell chronic lymphoid leukemia with a high number of losses in 13q14 as the sole cytogenetic aberration at diagnosis display different clinical and biological features: short overall survival and time to first therapy as well as more proliferation and less apoptosis. A quantification of the number of cells showing a genetic abnormality should, therefore, be included in the study of the prognostic factors of B-cell chronic lymphoid leukemia.


British Journal of Haematology | 1997

Prospective randomized study comparing the efficacy of bioequivalent doses of glycosylated and nonglycosylated rG-CSF for mobilizing peripheral blood progenitor cells.

F. De Arriba; María L. Lozano; Francisco José Ortuño; Inmaculada Heras; José M. Moraleda; Vicente Vicente

Thirty patients diagnosed with breast cancer were included in a prospective randomized study comparing the in vivo priming effect of bioequivalent doses of glycosylated (lenograstim) and nonglycosylated (filgrastim) rG‐CSF administration. Analysis of the efficacy of equivalent biological doses of both rG‐CSFs showed no significant differences either in the mobilization of the subpopulations of PBPC considered (CD34+, CD34+/38−, CD34+/DR−), the content of such CD34+ cell subsets in the leukapheresis product, or the cost of the mobilization and collection procedures between both recombinant molecules. These results suggest that priming with bioequivalent doses of the two commercially available forms of glycosylated or nonglycosylated rG‐CSF has a similar in vivo effect on PBPC mobilization.


Bone Marrow Transplantation | 1999

Autoaggression syndrome resembling acute graft-versus-host disease grade IV after autologous peripheral blood stem cell transplantation for breast cancer.

F de Arriba; Javier Corral; F Ayala; Inmaculada Heras; José M. Moraleda; Mm Osma; Rocío González-Conejero; Francisco José Ortuño; Vicente Vicente

Acute graft-versus-host disease (aGVHD) after autologous progenitor cell transplantation has been associated with blood transfusion or cyclosporine. Mild aGVHD grades I–II, identified as autoaggression or engraftment syndrome, has recently been described in autologous progenitor transplantation. Here, we report the first case of pathologically documented grade IV aGVHD after autologous peripheral blood progenitor cell transplantation in a patient with breast cancer. The allogeneic origin was excluded by molecular techniques, and no cyclosporine or cytokines were administered.


Haematologica | 2007

Imatinib mesylate in combination with chemotherapy in four children with de novo and advanced stage Philadelphia chromosome-positive acute lymphoblastic leukemia

Jose Luis Fuster; Mar Bermúdez; Ana Galera; María Esther Llinares; Doris Calle; Francisco José Ortuño

The role of imatinib in childhood Philadelphia chromosome-positive (Ph+) acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) has not been established. We treated four children with imatinib in combination with conventional chemotherapy (CT) before stem cell transplantation (SCT). Response evaluation consisted of fluorocytometric analysis of minimal residual disease (MRD) and standard qualitative RT-PCR follow-up.


American Journal of Hematology | 2015

The role of bone marrow biopsy and FDG-PET/CT in identifying bone marrow infiltration in the initial diagnosis of high grade non-Hodgkin B-cell lymphoma and Hodgkin lymphoma. accuracy in a multicenter series of 372 patients

Tzu-Hua Chen-Liang; Taida Martín-Santos; Andres Jerez; Leonor Senent; Maria Teresa Orero; Maria Jose Remigia; Begoña Muiña; Marta Romera; Hermogenes Fernandez–Muñoz; José María Raya; Marta Fernández-González; Aima Lancharro; Carolina Villegas; Juan Carlos Herrera; Laura Frutos; José L. Navarro; Jon Uña; Carolina Igua; Raquel Sánchez-Vañó; Maria del Puig Cozar; José Contreras; José Javier Sánchez-Blanco; Elena Pérez-Ceballos; Francisco José Ortuño

Bone marrow infiltration (BMI), categorized as an extra‐nodal site, affects stage and is associated with poor prognosis in newly diagnosed lymphoma patients. We have evaluated the accuracy of PET/CT and bone marrow biopsy (BMB) to assess BMI in 372 lymphoma patients [140 Hodgkin Lymphoma (HL) and 232 High Grade B‐cell non‐Hodgkin Lymphoma (HG B‐NHL), among them 155 Diffuse Large B‐Cell Lymphoma (DLCL)]. For HL cases, and taking into account PET/CT, sensitivity, negative predictive value (NPV) and accuracy were 96.7, 99.3, and 99.3% while those of BMB were 32.3, 83.8, and 85%, respectively. For HG B‐NHL and considering PET/CT, sensitivity, NPV, and accuracy were 52.7, 81.7, and 84.1%, while those of BMB were 77.6, 90.2, and 90.7%, respectively. In the HG B‐NHL group, 25 patients would have been under‐staged without BMB. These results lead us to recommend PET/CT and the avoidance of BMB to assess BMI in HL. In the case of HG B‐NHL, bone marrow status should be assessed firstly by means of PET/CT; only in either focal or diffuse PET/CT with low borderline SUV max values or in negative cases, should BMB be carried out afterwards. In the HG B‐NHL setting and at the present moment, both techniques are complementary. Am. J. Hematol. 90:686–690, 2015.


Bone Marrow Transplantation | 2001

Administration of post-autologous PBSCT rhG-CSF is associated with long-term low concentrations of bone marrow hematopoietic progenitor cells.

Mm Osma; Francisco José Ortuño; María L. Lozano; J Gómez-Espuch; F Ayala; I Sanchez-Serrano; E Perez-Ceballos; José M. Moraleda; Vicente Vicente

Recombinant human granulocyte colony-stimulating factor (rhG-CSF) has been widely used after autologous peripheral blood stem cell transplant (APBSCT) in an attempt to reduce the duration of neutropenia, but whether this treatment has any influence on long-term engraftment remains unknown. We have retrospectively analyzed data from breast cancer patients to compare post-APBSCT rhG-CSF administration in terms of the short-term benefit and myeloid marrow regeneration after 1 year. Group A included 10 patients not treated with post-APBSCT rhG-CSF, while groups B and C comprised 15 and 13 patients treated with this drug from days +1 and +6, respectively. No differences among the three groups were found in age, diagnosis, previous chemo-radiotherapy, CD34+/CD71− cell concentration in pre-transplant bone marrow (BM), mobilization schedule, CD34+ cell yield, conditioning regimen and post-transplant radiotherapy. Post-APBSCT rhG-CSF was shown to accelerate neutrophil recovery, but there were no significant differences in platelet recovery, transfusion requirements, days of fever, antibiotic administration or inhospital stay. With regard to BM hematopoietic precursors 1 year after APBSCT, significantly lower concentrations of total CD34+cells, committed CD34+/CD33+ subsets, and more immature CD34+/CD71− cells were found in both groups B and C compared with patients not having received the cytokine (group A). Thus, post-APBSCT rhG-CSF administration does not appear to beneficially affect procedure outcome, and might even impair long-term marrow hematopoiesis. Bone Marrow Transplantation (2001) 27, 1287–1292.


European Journal of Haematology | 2014

Chediak-Higashi syndrome: description of two novel homozygous missense mutations causing divergent clinical phenotype

Isabel Sánchez-Guiu; Ana Isabel Antón; Nuria García-Barberá; José Navarro-Fernández; Constantino Martínez; José Fuster; José Miguel Couselo; Francisco José Ortuño; Vicente Vicente; José Rivera; María L. Lozano

Chediak–Higashi syndrome (CHS) is a rare autosomal recessive disease resulting from mutations in the LYST/CHS1 gene, which encodes for a 429 kDa protein, CHS1/LYST, that regulates vesicle trafficking and determines the size of lysosomes and other organelles. To date, 60 different mutations have been characterized, and a reasonably straightforward phenotype–genotype correlation has been suggested. We describe two patients on opposite ends of the CHS clinical spectrum with novel missense mutations. We characterized these patients in terms of their mutations, protein localization and expression, mRNA stability, and electrostatic potential. Patient 1 is the first report of a severe early‐onset CHS with a homozygous missense mutation (c.11362 G>A, p.G3725R) in the LYST/CHS1 gene. This molecular change results in a reduction at the CHS1 protein level, not due to an mRNA effect, but maybe a consequence of both, a change in the structure of the protein and most likely attributable to the remarkable serious perturbation in the electrostatic potential. Patient 2, who exhibited the adolescence form of the disease, was found to be homozygous for a novel missense mutation c.961 T>C, p.C258R, which seemed to have minor effect on the structure of the CHS1/LYST protein. Reexamining accepted premises of missense mutant alleles being reported among patients with clinically mild forms of the disorder should be carried out, and attempts to link genotype and clinical phenotype require identifying the actual molecular effect of the mutation. Early and accurate diagnosis of the severity of the disease is extremely important to early differentiate patients who would benefit from premature enrollment into a transplantation protocol.


Genes, Chromosomes and Cancer | 2014

Interstitial 13q14 Deletions Detected in the Karyotype and Translocations with Concomitant Deletion at 13q14 in Chronic Lymphocytic Leukemia: Different Genetic Mechanisms but Equivalent Poorer Clinical Outcome

Anna Puiggros; Marta Venturas; Marta Salido; Gonzalo Blanco; Concepción Fernández-Rodríguez; Rosa Collado; Alberto Valiente; Neus Ruiz-Xivillé; Ana Carrió; Francisco José Ortuño; Elisa Luño; María José Calasanz; María Teresa Ardanaz; María Ángeles Piñan; Elisabet Talavera; María Teresa González; Margarita Ortega; Isabel Marugán; Ana Ferrer; Eva Gimeno; Beatriz Bellosillo; Julio Delgado; José Ángel Hernández; Jesús María Hernández-Rivas; Blanca Espinet

Deletion of 13q14 as the sole abnormality is a good prognostic marker in chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL). Nonetheless, the prognostic value of reciprocal 13q14 translocations [t(13q)] with related 13q losses has not been fully elucidated. We described clinical and biological characteristics of 25 CLL patients with t(13q), and compared with 62 patients carrying interstitial del(13q) by conventional G‐banding cytogenetics (CGC) [i‐del(13q)] and 295 patients with del(13q) only detected by fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) [F‐del(13q)]. Besides from the CLL FISH panel (D13S319, CEP12, ATM, TP53), we studied RB1 deletions in all t(13q) cases and a representative group of i‐del(13q) and F‐del(13q). We analyzed NOTCH1, SF3B1, and MYD88 mutations in t(13q) cases by Sanger sequencing. In all, 25 distinct t(13q) were described. All these cases showed D13S319 deletion while 32% also lost RB1. The median percentage of 13q‐deleted nuclei did not differ from i‐del(13q) patients (73% vs. 64%), but both were significantly higher than F‐del(13q) (52%, P < 0.001). Moreover, t(13q) patients showed an increased incidence of biallelic del(13q) (52% vs. 11.3% and 14.9%, P < 0.001) and higher rates of concomitant 17p deletion (37.5% vs. 8.6% and 7.2%, P < 0.001). RB1 involvement was significantly higher in the i‐del(13q) group (79%, P < 0.001). Two t(13q) patients (11.8%) carried NOTCH1 mutations. Time to first treatment in t(13q) and i‐del(13q) was shorter than F‐del(13q) (67, 44, and 137 months, P = 0.029), and preserved significance in the multivariate analysis. In conclusion, t(13q) and del(13q) patients detected by CGC constitute a subgroup within the 13q‐deleted CLL patients associated with a worse clinical outcome.


Bone Marrow Transplantation | 2000

Mobilization of hematopoietic progenitor cells with paclitaxel (taxol) as a single chemotheraupetic agent, associated with rhG-CSF.

J Gómez-Espuch; José M. Moraleda; Francisco José Ortuño; María L. Lozano; F Ayala; Carlos Vallejo; F de Arriba; Vicente Vicente

We assessed the mobilization capacity of taxol with rhG-CSF, both as a single chemotherapeutic agent and in the presence of cyclophosphamide (CY), and compared the effect with yields achieved when mobilization was performed solely with rhG-CSF. Fifteen patients with breast cancer received taxol 170 mg/m2 (continuous infusion, day 1) and rhG-CSF (8 μg/kg/day, from day 2 until the end of apheresis) (T-G group), while seven breast cancer patients were additionally treated with CY (4 g/m2) on day 2, followed by rhG-CSF starting at similar doses on day 3 (T-CY-G group). The PBSC collections after taxol with/without CY were compared with those of 30 breast cancer patients who had received rhG-CSF (8 μg/kg/day) for mobilization. No differences were found in the characteristics of patients included in any of the three mobilization groups. The median yield of CD34+ cells from all patients included in taxol containing schedules was 9 × 106/kg (range 2–26) collected with a median of one apheresis procedure (range 1–4). Leukaphereses began earlier in the T-G group (median day 8, range 7–10) than in the T-CY-G group (median day 13, range 11–17). In most patients (20 out of 22) who received taxol containing regimens, more than 2.5 × 106 CD34+ cells/kg, a threshold considered to be sufficient for hematopoietic reconstitution, were collected with a single apheresis. Those patients in the T-G group experienced less neutropenic and thrombocytopenic days, with all neutropenic fever episodes developing in patients treated with the T-CY-G schedule (43%). When considering priming with rhG-CSF alone in our historical cohort of 30 breast cancer patients, a significant detrimental effect was observed in comparison with taxol mobilizing schedules, in the number of aphereses performed, in the total yield CD34+cells and in the number of patients who achieved the target dose of 2.5 × 106/kg CD34+ cells within the first collection procedure. We conclude that taxol containing schedules are effective in mobilizing PBSC and facilitate the collection of high yields of CD34+ cells (usually more than 5 × 106/kg recipient body weight) with a reduced number of apheresis procedures. Taxol, as a single agent with rhG-CSF, exhibits less hematological toxicity than the combination chemotherapy mobilization regimen including CY. Bone Marrow Transplantation (2000) 25, 231–235.


Oncotarget | 2017

Patients with chronic lymphocytic leukemia and complex karyotype show an adverse outcome even in absence of TP53/ATM FISH deletions

Anna Puiggros; Rosa Collado; María José Calasanz; Margarita Ortega; Neus Ruiz-Xivillé; Alfredo Rivas-Delgado; Elisa Luño; Teresa González; Blanca Navarro; MªDolores García-Malo; Alberto Valiente; José Ángel Hernández; María Teresa Ardanaz; María Ángeles Piñan; María Laura Blanco; María Hernández-Sánchez; Ana Batlle-López; Rocío Salgado; Marta Salido; Ana Ferrer; Pau Abrisqueta; Eva Gimeno; Eugenia Abella; Christelle Ferrà; María José Terol; Francisco José Ortuño; Dolors Costa; Carol Moreno; Felix Carbonell; Francesc Bosch

Genomic complexity identified by chromosome banding analysis (CBA) predicts a worse clinical outcome in CLL patients treated either with standard or new treatments. Herein, we analyzed the clinical impact of complex karyotypes (CK) with or without high-risk FISH deletions (ATM and/or TP53, HR-FISH) in a cohort of 1045 untreated MBL/CLL patients. In all, 99/1045 (9.5%) patients displayed a CK. Despite ATM and TP53 deletions were more common in CK (25% vs 7%; P < 0.001; 40% vs 5%; P < 0.001, respectively), only 44% (40/90) patients with TP53 deletions showed a CK. CK group showed a significant higher two-year cumulative incidence of treatment (48% vs 20%; P < 0.001), as well as a shorter overall survival (OS) (79 mo vs not reached; P < 0.001). When patients were categorized regarding CK and HR-FISH, those with both characteristics showed the worst median OS (52 mo) being clearly distinct from those non-CK and non-HR-FISH (median not reached), but no significant differences were detected between cases with only CK or HR-FISH. Both CK and TP53 deletion remained statistically significant in the multivariate analysis for OS. In conclusion, CK group is globally associated with advanced disease and poor prognostic markers. Further investigation in larger cohorts with CK lacking HR-FISH is needed to elucidate which mechanisms underlie the poor outcome of this subgroup.Genomic complexity identified by chromosome banding analysis (CBA) predicts a worse clinical outcome in CLL patients treated either with standard or new treatments. Herein, we analyzed the clinical impact of complex karyotypes (CK) with or without high-risk FISH deletions (ATM and/or TP53, HR-FISH) in a cohort of 1045 untreated MBL/CLL patients. In all, 99/1045 (9.5%) patients displayed a CK. Despite ATM and TP53 deletions were more common in CK (25% vs 7%; P < 0.001; 40% vs 5%; P < 0.001, respectively), only 44% (40/90) patients with TP53 deletions showed a CK. CK group showed a significant higher two-year cumulative incidence of treatment (48% vs 20%; P < 0.001), as well as a shorter overall survival (OS) (79 mo vs not reached; P < 0.001). When patients were categorized regarding CK and HR-FISH, those with both characteristics showed the worst median OS (52 mo) being clearly distinct from those non-CK and non-HR-FISH (median not reached), but no significant differences were detected between cases with only CK or HR-FISH. Both CK and TP53 deletion remained statistically significant in the multivariate analysis for OS. In conclusion, CK group is globally associated with advanced disease and poor prognostic markers. Further investigation in larger cohorts with CK lacking HR-FISH is needed to elucidate which mechanisms underlie the poor outcome of this subgroup.

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Mm Osma

University of Murcia

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