Geoff D.E. Cuvelier
University of Manitoba
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Featured researches published by Geoff D.E. Cuvelier.
American Journal of Hematology | 2015
Allison King; Naynesh Kamani; Nancy Bunin; Indira Sahdev; Joel A. Brochstein; Robert J. Hayashi; Michael Grimley; Allistair Abraham; Jacqueline Dioguardi; Ka Wah Chan; Dorothea Douglas; Roberta H. Adams; Martin Andreansky; Eric Jon Anderson; Andrew L. Gilman; Sonali Chaudhury; Lolie Yu; Jignesh Dalal; Gregory A. Hale; Geoff D.E. Cuvelier; Akshat Jain; Jennifer Krajewski; Alfred Gillio; Kimberly A. Kasow; David Delgado; Eric Hanson; Lisa Murray; Shalini Shenoy
Fifty‐two children with symptomatic sickle cell disease sickle cell disease (SCD) (N = 43) or transfusion‐dependent thalassemia (N = 9) received matched sibling donor marrow (46), marrow and cord product (5), or cord blood (1) allografts following reduced intensity conditioning (RIC) with alemtuzumab, fludarabine, and melphalan between March 2003 and May 2014*. The Kaplan–Meier probabilities of overall and event‐free survival at a median of 3.42 (range, 0.75–11.83) years were 94.2% and 92.3% for the group, 93% and 90.7% for SCD, and 100% and 100% for thalassemia, respectively. Treatment‐related mortality (all related to graft versus host disease, GVHD) was noted in three (5.7%) recipients, all 17–18 years of age. Acute and chronic GVHD was noted in 23% and 13%, respectively, with 81% of recipients off immunosuppression by 1 year. Graft rejection was limited to the single umbilical cord blood recipient who had prompt autologous hematopoietic recovery. Fourteen (27%) had mixed chimerism at 1 year and beyond; all had discontinued immunosuppression between 4 and 12 months from transplant with no subsequent consequence on GVHD or rejection. Infectious complications included predominantly bacteremia (48% were staphylococcus) and CMV reactivation (43%) necessitating preemptive therapy. Lymphocyte recovery beyond 6 months was associated with subsidence of infectious complications. All patients who engrafted were transfusion independent; no strokes or pulmonary complications of SCD were noted, and pain symptoms subsided within 6 months posttransplant. These findings support using RIC for patients with hemoglobinopathy undergoing matched sibling marrow transplantation (*www.Clinical Trials.gov: NCT00920972, NCT01050855, NCT02435901). Am. J. Hematol. 90:1093–1098, 2015.
Biology of Blood and Marrow Transplantation | 2013
Radojka M. Savic; Morton J. Cowan; Christopher C. Dvorak; Sung-Yun Pai; Luis M. Pereira; Imke H. Bartelink; Jaap Jan Boelens; Robbert G. M. Bredius; Rob Wynn; Geoff D.E. Cuvelier; Peter J. Shaw; Mary Slatter; Janel Long-Boyle
Little information is currently available regarding the pharmacokinetics (PK) of busulfan in infants and small children to help guide decisions for safe and efficacious drug therapy. The objective of this study was to develop an algorithm for individualized dosing of i.v. busulfan in infants and children weighing ≤12 kg, that would achieve targeted exposure with the first dose of busulfan. Population PK modeling was conducted using intensive time-concentration data collected through the routine therapeutic drug monitoring of busulfan in 149 patients from 8 centers. Busulfan PK was well described by a 1-compartment base model with linear elimination. The important clinical covariates affecting busulfan PK were actual body weight and age. Based on our model, the predicted clearance of busulfan increases approximately 1.7-fold between 6 weeks to 2 years of life. For infants age <5 months, the model-predicted doses (mg/kg) required to achieve a therapeutic concentration at steady state of 600-900 ng/mL (area under the curve range, 900-1350 μM·min) were much lower compared with standard busulfan doses of 1.1 mg/kg. These results could help guide clinicians and inform better dosing decisions for busulfan in young infants and small children undergoing hematopoietic cell transplantation.
The Lancet Haematology | 2016
Imke H. Bartelink; Arief Lalmohamed; Elisabeth van Reij; Christopher C. Dvorak; Rada Savic; Juliette Zwaveling; Robbert G. M. Bredius; A.C.G. Egberts; Marc Bierings; Morris Kletzel; Peter J. Shaw; Christa E. Nath; George Hempel; Marc Ansari; Maja Krajinovic; Yves Théorêt; Michel Duval; Ron J. Keizer; Henrique Bittencourt; Moustapha Hassan; Tayfun Güngör; Robert Wynn; Paul Veys; Geoff D.E. Cuvelier; Sarah Marktel; Roberto Chiesa; Morton J. Cowan; Mary Slatter; Melisa K. Stricherz; Cathryn Jennissen
BACKGROUND Intravenous busulfan combined with therapeutic drug monitoring to guide dosing improves outcomes after allogeneic haemopoietic cell transplantation (HCT). The best method to estimate busulfan exposure and optimum exposure in children or young adults remains unclear. We therefore assessed three approaches to estimate intravenous busulfan exposure (expressed as cumulative area under the curve [AUC]) and associated busulfan AUC with clinical outcomes in children or young adults undergoing allogeneic HCT. METHODS In this retrospective analysis, patients from 15 centres in the Netherlands, USA, Canada, Switzerland, UK, Italy, Germany, and Australia who received a busulfan-based conditioning regimen between March 18, 2001, and Feb 12, 2015, were included. Cumulative AUC was calculated by numerical integration using non-linear mixed effect modelling (AUCNONMEM), non-compartmental analysis (AUC from 0 to infinity [AUC0-∞] and to the next dose [AUC0-τ]), and by individual centres using various approaches (AUCcentre). The main outcome of interest was event-free survival. Other outcomes of interest were graft failure or relapse, or both; transplantation-related mortality; acute toxicity (veno-occlusive disease or acute graft versus-host disease [GvHD]); chronic GvHD; overall survival; and chronic-GvHD-free event-free survival. We used propensity-score-adjusted Cox proportional hazard models, Weibull models, and Fine-Gray competing risk regressions for statistical analyses. FINDINGS 790 patients were enrolled, 674 of whom were included: 274 (41%) with malignant and 400 (59%) with non-malignant disease. Median age was 4·5 years (IQR 1·4-10·7). The median busulfan AUCNONMEM was 74·4 mg × h/L (95% CI 31·1-104·6), which correlated with the standardised method AUC0-∞ (r2=0·74), but the latter correlated poorly with AUCcentre (r2=0·35). Estimated 2-year event-free survival was 69·7% (95% CI 66·2-73·0). Event-free survival at 2 years was 77·0% (95% CI 72·1-82·9) in the 257 patients with an optimum intravenous busulfan AUC of 78-101 mg × h/L compared with 66·1% (60·9-71·4) in the 235 patients at the low historical target of 58-86 mg × h/L and 49·5% (29·2-66·0) in the 44 patients with a high (>101 mg × h/L) busulfan AUC (p=0·011). Compared with the low AUC group, graft failure or relapse occurred less frequently in the optimum AUC group (hazard ratio [HR] 0·57, 95% CI 0·39-0·84; p=0·0041). Acute toxicity (HR 1·69, 1·12-2·57; p=0·013) and transplantation-related mortality (2·99, 1·82-4·92; p<0·0001) were significantly higher in the high AUC group (>101 mg × h/L) than in the low AUC group (<78 mg × h/L), independent of indication; no difference was noted between AUC groups for chronic GvHD (<78 mg × h/L vs ≥78 mg × h/L, HR 1·30, 95% CI 0·73-2·33; p=0·37). INTERPRETATION Improved clinical outcomes are likely to be achieved by targeting the busulfan AUC to 78-101 mg × h/L using a new validated pharmacokinetic model for all indications. FUNDING Research Allocation Program and the UCSF Helen Friller Family Comprehensive Cancer Center and the Mt Zion Health Fund of the University of California, San Francisco.
Therapeutic Drug Monitoring | 2012
Imke H. Bartelink; Charlotte van Kesteren; Jaap Jan Boelens; Toine C. G. Egberts; Marc Bierings; Geoff D.E. Cuvelier; Robert Wynn; Mary Slatter; Robert Chiesa; Meindert Danhof; Catherijne A. J. Knibbe
Background: Recently a pediatric pharmacokinetic (PK) model was developed for busulfan to explain the wide variability in PK of busulfan in children, as this variability is known to influence the outcome of hematopoietic stem cell transplantation in terms of toxicity and event free survival. This study assesses the predictive performance of this busulfan PK model in a new, more diverse pediatric population, including data from patients with different underlying diseases, ethnicities, body weights, ages, and body mass indices, from 5 international pediatric transplant centers. Patients and Methods: The previously published (original) busulfan PK model was developed from data of 245 patients (0.1–26 years of age). To externally validate this model, data were collected from another 158 patients (0.1–35 years) who underwent hematopoietic stem cell transplantation in 5 international transplant centers. Observed versus predicted plots, normalized prediction distribution error analysis, refit of the model on the external (n = 158) and combined datasets (n = 403), and subpopulation analyses were evaluated. Results: The original busulfan PK model was found to be stable and parameter estimates precise. Concentrations predicted by this model were in good agreement with the observed concentrations from the 5 external datasets. Plasma concentrations in patients with different underlying diseases, ethnicities, body weights, ages, and body mass indices were adequately predicted. Conclusions: Our pediatric busulfan PK model has been externally validated. This model predicts busulfan concentrations in pediatric and young adult patients ranging between 3 and 86 kg without bias and with good precision, regardless of transplant center, underlying disease, ethnicity, body weight age, or body mass index. This busulfan PK model forms the basis for individualized busulfan dosing.
Pediatric Blood & Cancer | 2014
Geoff D.E. Cuvelier; Tina J. Baker; Elaine F. Peddie; Linda M. Casey; Pascal J. Lambert; Dianne S. Distefano; Marlene G. Wardle; Marcel A. Romanick; David Dix; Beverly Wilson
Megestrol acetate (MA) is an appetite stimulant with efficacy in promoting weight gain in adults with cancer‐associated anorexia–cachexia. Studies documenting MA efficacy in children, however, are limited. We present the first randomized, double‐blind, placebo‐controlled clinical trial of MA versus placebo in children with cancer and weight loss.
Clinical Immunology | 2009
Geoff D.E. Cuvelier; Kirk R. Schultz; Jeffrey H. Davis; Aaron F. Hirschfeld; Anne K. Junker; Rusung Tan; Stuart E. Turvey
This FOCIS Centers of Excellence Short Analytical Review is based on the clinical vignette of two boys from the same family with very different outcomes following hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT) for X-linked severe combined immunodeficiency (SCID). We review the kinetics of immune reconstitution following HSCT in SCID and emphasize the latest information regarding optimizing transplant outcomes for this disorder. The cases illustrate the difficulties and controversies surrounding the optimal strategies for planning SCID transplants. Specifically, we will focus on 3 areas of current debate and investigation: (i) factors involved in donor selection; (ii) the role of pretransplant conditioning; and (iii) benefits of early HSCT for SCID.
Haemophilia | 2006
Geoff D.E. Cuvelier; Jeffrey H. Davis; E. Purves; John Wu
Summary. We describe the case of a spinal epidural haematoma in an infant with severe haemophilia A. Initial signs and symptoms were non‐specific resulting in delay of the diagnosis and more definitive therapy. The patient eventually developed torticollis, acute flaccid paralysis of the upper extremities, and respiratory distress, prompting radiological examination of the spinal cord. The patient was treated with recombinant FactorVIII and laminectomy. Neurological recovery was complete 3 months following the event. We hypothesize that infants with haemophilia may be at higher risk for this rare complication because of their increasing mobility, frequent falls while cruising furniture, and lack of prophylactic factor replacement. Non‐specific signs such as irritability without a focus should alert the clinician to this diagnostic possibility. Torticollis should prompt rapid radiological evaluation of the cervical spine with magnetic resonance imaging to avoid delay in diagnosis.
Blood | 2017
Jennifer Heimall; Brent R. Logan; Morton J. Cowan; Luigi D. Notarangelo; Linda M. Griffith; Jennifer M. Puck; Donald B. Kohn; Michael A. Pulsipher; Suhag Parikh; Caridad Martinez; Neena Kapoor; Richard J. O'Reilly; Michael Boyer; Sung-Yun Pai; Frederick Goldman; Lauri Burroughs; Sharat Chandra; Morris Kletzel; Monica S. Thakar; James A. Connelly; Geoff D.E. Cuvelier; Blachy J. Dávila Saldaña; Alan P. Knutsen; Kathleen E. Sullivan; Kenneth B. DeSantes; Alfred P. Gillio; Elie Haddad; Aleksandra Petrovic; Troy C. Quigg; Angela Smith
The Primary Immune Deficiency Treatment Consortium (PIDTC) is enrolling children with severe combined immunodeficiency (SCID) to a prospective natural history study. We analyzed patients treated with allogeneic hematopoietic cell transplantation (HCT) from 2010 to 2014, including 68 patients with typical SCID and 32 with leaky SCID, Omenn syndrome, or reticular dysgenesis. Most (59%) patients were diagnosed by newborn screening or family history. The 2-year overall survival was 90%, but was 95% for those who were infection-free at HCT vs 81% for those with active infection (P = .009). Other factors, including the diagnosis of typical vs leaky SCID/Omenn syndrome, diagnosis via family history or newborn screening, use of preparative chemotherapy, or the type of donor used, did not impact survival. Although 1-year post-HCT median CD4 counts and freedom from IV immunoglobulin were improved after the use of preparative chemotherapy, other immunologic reconstitution parameters were not affected, and the potential for late sequelae in extremely young infants requires additional evaluation. After a T-cell-replete graft, landmark analysis at day +100 post-HCT revealed that CD3 < 300 cells/μL, CD8 < 50 cells/μL, CD45RA < 10%, or a restricted Vβ T-cell receptor repertoire (<13 of 24 families) were associated with the need for a second HCT or death. In the modern era, active infection continues to pose the greatest threat to survival for SCID patients. Although newborn screening has been effective in diagnosing SCID patients early in life, there is an urgent need to identify validated approaches through prospective trials to ensure that patients proceed to HCT infection free. The trial was registered at www.clinicaltrials.gov as #NCT01186913.
Biology of Blood and Marrow Transplantation | 2015
Qingdong Guan; Anna R. Blankstein; Karla Anjos; Oleksandra Synova; Marie Tulloch; Angeline Giftakis; Bin Yang; Pascal J. Lambert; Zhikang Peng; Geoff D.E. Cuvelier; Donna A. Wall
Myeloid-derived suppressor cells (MDSCs) are regulatory cell populations that have the ability to suppress effector T cell responses and promote the development of regulatory T cells (Tregs). They are a heterogeneous population of immature myeloid progenitors that include monocytic and granulocytic subsets. We postulated that given the rapid expansion of myeloid cells post-transplant, these members of the innate immune system may be important contributors to the early immune environment post-transplant. To evaluate the kinetics of recovery and function of MDSCs after allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplant (HSCT), 26 patients undergoing allogeneic HSCT were studied at 6 time points in the first 3 months after HSCT. Both MDSC subsets recovered between 2 and 4 weeks, well before the recovery of T and B lymphocytes. MDSC subset recovery positively correlated with T, B, and/or double-negative T cell numbers after HSCT. MDSCs isolated from patients post-transplant were functional in that they suppressed third-party CD4(+) T cell proliferation and Th1 differentiation and promoted Treg development. In conclusion, functional MDSC are present early after HSCT and likely contribute to the regulatory cell population post-transplant.
Pediatric Blood & Cancer | 2008
Geoff D.E. Cuvelier; Aleksander M. Vitali; Jason C. Ford; David Dix
We report the first case of multiple intracranial tumors (“chloromas”) at diagnosis of Philadelphia chromosome positive acute lymphoblastic leukemia. The patient presented comatose with signs of cerebral herniation. Initial management of raised intracranial pressure and hyperleukocytosis followed by emergent whole brain radiation therapy reversed the life‐threatening neurological signs. High‐dose chemotherapy combined with daily imatinib mesylate induced a rapid and sustained bone marrow remission. Ongoing rehabilitation resulted in a near complete neurological recovery within 6 months of diagnosis. This outcome justifies aggressive early management of increased intracranial pressure and hyperleukocytosis in future similar presentations. Pediatr Blood Cancer 2008;51:135–137.