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Dive into the research topics where Ismael Buño is active.

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Featured researches published by Ismael Buño.


Leukemia | 2005

Reliable quantification of hematopoietic chimerism after allogeneic transplantation for acute leukemia using amplification by real-time PCR of null alleles and insertion/deletion polymorphisms.

A Jiménez-Velasco; M Barrios; Jose Roman-Gomez; G Navarro; Ismael Buño; J A Castillejo; A I Rodríguez; G García-Gemar; A Torres; A I Heiniger

Increasing mixed chimerism (MC) after allogeneic stem cell transplantation (SCT) has been associated with a high risk of relapse in acute leukemia. We evaluated a new method for chimerism detection, based on the quantitative real-time PCR (qrt-PCR) amplification of null alleles or insertion/deletion polymorphisms (indels). All qrt-PCR assays with null alleles and indels attained a sensitivity of at least 10−4, as well as good intra- and interassay concordance, and a high accuracy in experiments with cell mixtures. Informativeness was found in 80.3% of the 61 donor/recipient pairs tested. Nonrelapsed patients showed a progressive decrease in peripheral blood chimerism to values below 0.01% (complete chimerism (CC)). Bone marrow chimerism failed to reach CC more than 4 years after SCT. Increasing MC was observed prior to relapse in 88.2% of patients. Compared with conventional PCR amplification of variable number of tandem repeats, qrt-PCR predicted a significantly higher number of relapses (88.2 vs 44.4%) with a median anticipation period of 58 days. In conclusion, chimerism determination by qrt-PCR amplification of null alleles and indels constitutes a useful tool for the follow-up of patients with acute leukemia after SCT, showing better results than those obtained with conventional PCR.


European Journal of Haematology | 2014

Prognostic impact of minimal residual disease analysis by flow cytometry in patients with acute myeloid leukemia before and after allogeneic hemopoietic stem cell transplantation

Mariana Bastos-Oreiro; Ana Pérez-Corral; Carolina Martínez-Laperche; Leyre Bento; Cristina Pascual; Mi Kwon; Pascual Balsalobre; Cristina Muñoz; Elena Buces; David Serrano; Jorge Gayoso; Ismael Buño; Javier Anguita; Jose L. Diez-Martin

Allogeneic stem cell transplantation (allo‐SCT) has become the treatment of choice in patients with intermediate‐risk and high‐risk acute myeloid leukemia (AML). The quality of response to treatment, assessed in terms of detection of minimal residual disease (MRD), has been consistently associated with prognosis and clinical outcome in patients with AML. The aim of the present study was to evaluate the prognostic impact of analyzing MRD in bone marrow using 4‐color multiparametric flow cytometry (MFC) in 29 patients with AML before and after allo‐SCT. Eighteen patients who were shown to be MRD‐negative [≤0.1% leukemia‐associated immunophenotypes (LAIPs)] by MFC at transplantation and underwent allo‐SCT had lower rates of relapse (15% vs. 66%, P = 0.045), better overall 1‐yr survival (83% vs. 52%, P = 0.021) and a lower cumulative incidence of relapse (P = 0.032) than patients who were MRD‐positive (>0.1%). All post‐transplant MRD‐positive patients underwent a therapeutic intervention after transplant (tapering of immunosuppression, donor lymphocyte infusion, or re‐transplant) with the intention of preventing relapse. Disease was controlled and MRD disappeared in five of these patients. Disease recurred in the other seven patients. We can conclude that follow‐up with MFC for the detection of MRD in AML before and after SCT is useful for predicting relapse. In the post‐transplant setting, monitoring of MRD by MFC could be a key preemptive intervention.


Biology of Blood and Marrow Transplantation | 2013

Single Cord Blood Combined with HLA-Mismatched Third Party Donor Cells: Comparable Results to Matched Unrelated Donor Transplantation in High-Risk Patients with Hematologic Disorders

Mi Kwon; Pascual Balsalobre; David Serrano; A. Pérez Corral; Ismael Buño; Javier Anguita; Jorge Gayoso; Jose L. Diez-Martin

Matched unrelated donor (MUD) transplantation is the first alternative in the absence of a matched sibling donor. For patients without a suitable adult donor, we have adopted the dual stem cell transplantation protocol consisting of cord blood (CB) in combination with CD34(+) cells from a third party HLA-mismatched donor. We analyzed the outcomes of patients undergoing both procedures in a single center. Starting in 2004, a total of 20 patients with high-risk disease underwent 22 dual transplants and 25 patients underwent myeloablative MUD transplantation. The 30-day cumulative incidence of neutrophil engraftment was similar in both groups (91% and 95%), with a median time to engraftment of 14 and 16 days, respectively. Grade II-IV acute graft-versus-host disease was more frequent in the MUD group (40% versus 5%). Except for a tendency toward a higher incidence of viral hemorrhagic cystitis in the dual transplantation group, posttransplantation infectious events were comparable in the 2 groups. The 3-year cumulative incidence rates of relapse (41% versus 44%) and nonrelapse mortality (30% versus 25%) were similar in the MUD and dual transplantation cohorts. Estimated 3-year overall survival and disease-free survival were 47% and 41%, respectively, with no survival advantage for either group. In our experience, dual transplantation offers survival rates comparable to those from myeloablative MUD transplantation with similar nonrelapse mortality rates.


Biology of Blood and Marrow Transplantation | 2012

Donor CTLA-4 genotype influences clinical outcome after T cell-depleted allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation from HLA-identical sibling donors.

Anna Bosch-Vizcaya; Arianne Perez-Garcia; Salut Brunet; Carlos Solano; Ismael Buño; Vicent Guillem; Carolina Martínez-Laperche; Guillermo Sanz; Cristina Barrenetxea; Carmen Martinez; Esperanza Tuset; Natàlia Lloveras; Rosa Coll; Ramon Guardia; Yolanda González; Josep M. Roncero; Anna Bustins; Santiago Gardella; Cristalina Fernández; Joan Buch; David Gallardo

CTLA-4 (cytotoxic T-lymphocyte antigen-4) plays a pivotal role in inhibiting T cell activation through competitive interaction with B7 molecules and interruption of costimulatory signals mediated by CD28. Polymorphisms on the CTLA-4 gene have been previously associated with autoimmune diseases, predisposition to leukemic relapse, and with graft-versus-host disease (GVHD) or relapse after allogeneic transplant. As CTLA-4 is expressed on T-lymphocytes, the aim of this study was to determine whether the donor CTLA-4 CT60 genotype also influences clinical outcome even after T cell depletion with CD34-positive selection. We studied 136 patient-donor pairs. Overall survival (OS) was worse for those patients who received grafts from a donor with the CT60 AA genotype rather than from a donor with the AG or GG genotype (35.6% vs 49.4%; P = .043). This association was confirmed through multivariate analysis, which identified the donor CT60 genotype as an independent risk factor for OS (P = .008; hazard ratio [HR]: 2.24, 95% confidence interval [CI]: 1.23-4.08). The donor CT60 AA genotype was also associated with lower disease-free survival, this being related to an increased risk of relapse (P = .001; HR: 3.41, 95% CI: 1.67-6.96) and a trend toward higher transplant-related mortality. These associations were stronger when considering only patients in the early stage of disease. Our results suggest that graft-versus-leukemia (GVL) activity after T cell depletion is conditioned by the donor CTLA-4 genotype.


Leukemia Research | 2013

Application of FISH 7q in MDS patients without monosomy 7 or 7q deletion by conventional G-banding cytogenetics: Does −7/7q− detection by FISH have prognostic value?

Vera Adema; Jesús Hernández; María Abáigar; Eva Lumbreras; Esperanza Such; Anna Calull; Esther Dominguez; Leonor Arenillas; Mar Mallo; José Cervera; Isabel Marugán; Mar Tormo; F. García; Teresa González; Elisa Luño; Carmen Sanzo; María Luisa Martín; Manuela Fernández; Dolors Costa; Beatriz Segovia Blázquez; Beatriz Barreña; Fernando Marco; Ana Batlle; Ismael Buño; Carolina Martínez-Laperche; Victor Noriega; Rosa Collado; David Ivars; Felix Carbonell; Isabel Vallcorba

Chromosomal abnormalities are detected in 40-60% of patients with de novo myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS). This study used the FISH technique in 773 patients with de novo MDS without evidence of monosomy 7 (-7) or 7q deletion (7q-) by conventional G-banding cytogenetics (CC) to analyze their prognostic impact by FISH alone. FISH detected -7/7q- in 5.2% of patients. Presence of -7/7q- was associated with shorter overall survival than absence of such aberrations. Our results suggest that FISH 7q could be beneficial in patients with intermediate WHO morphologic risk stratification and no evidence of -7/7q- by CC.


Bone Marrow Transplantation | 2016

Busulfan-based reduced intensity conditioning regimens for haploidentical transplantation in relapsed/refractory Hodgkin lymphoma: Spanish multicenter experience

J Gayoso; P Balsalobre; M J Pascual; C Castilla-Llorente; Lucía López-Corral; M Kwon; David P. Serrano; José Luis Piñana; P Herrera; Christelle Ferrà; C Pascual; Inmaculada Heras; Pau Montesinos; A Zabalza; L Bento; A Figuera; Ismael Buño; Jose L. Diez-Martin

Relapsed or refractory Hodgkin lymphoma (advanced HL) still remains a therapeutic challenge. Recently, unmanipulated haploidentical related donor transplant with reduced conditioning regimen (HAPLO-RIC) and post-transplant cyclophosphamide (PT-Cy) as GvHD prophylaxis has became a promising rescue strategy potentially available to almost every patient. This paper reports our multicenter experience using an IV busulfan-based HAPLO-RIC regimen and PT-Cy in the treatment of 43 patients with advanced HL. Engraftment occurred in 42 patients (97.5%), with a median time to neutrophil and platelet recovery of 18 and 26 days. Cumulative incidences of grades II–IV acute GvHD and chronic GvHD were 39% and 19%, respectively. With a median follow-up of 25.5 months for survivors, 27 patients are alive, with 22 of them disease free. Cumulative incidences of 1-year non-relapse mortality and relapse at 2 years were 21% and 24%, respectively. The estimated 2-year event-free survival (EFS) and overall survival (OS) were 48% and 58%, respectively. CR prior to HAPLO-RIC correlated with better EFS (78.5% vs 33.5%; P=0.015) and OS (86% vs 46%; P=0.044). Our findings further confirm prior reports using HAPLO-RIC in advanced HL in a multicenter approach employing an IV busulfan-based conditioning regimen.


Journal of Hematology & Oncology | 2014

Hypermethylation of the alternative AWT1 promoter in hematological malignancies is a highly specific marker for acute myeloid leukemias despite high expression levels

Amy Guillaumet-Adkins; Julia Richter; María D. Odero; Juan Sandoval; Xabi Agirre; Albert Catala; Manel Esteller; Felipe Prosper; María José Calasanz; Ismael Buño; Mi Kwon; Franck Court; Reiner Siebert; David Monk

BackgroundWilms tumor 1 (WT1) is over-expressed in numerous cancers with respect to normal cells, and has either a tumor suppressor or oncogenic role depending on cellular context. This gene is associated with numerous alternatively spliced transcripts, which initiate from two different unique first exons within the WT1 and the alternative (A)WT1 promoter intervals. Within the hematological system, WT1 expression is restricted to CD34+/CD38- cells and is undetectable after differentiation. Detectable expression of this gene is an excellent marker for minimal residual disease in acute myeloid leukemia (AML), but the underlying epigenetic alterations are unknown.MethodsTo determine the changes in the underlying epigenetic landscape responsible for this expression, we characterized expression, DNA methylation and histone modification profiles in 28 hematological cancer cell lines and confirmed the methylation signature in 356 cytogenetically well-characterized primary hematological malignancies.ResultsDespite high expression of WT1 and AWT1 transcripts in AML-derived cell lines, we observe robust hypermethylation of the AWT1 promoter and an epigenetic switch from a permissive to repressive chromatin structure between normal cells and AML cell lines. Subsequent methylation analysis in our primary leukemia and lymphoma cohort revealed that the epigenetic signature identified in cell lines is specific to myeloid-lineage malignancies, irrespective of underlying mutational status or translocation. In addition to being a highly specific marker for AML diagnosis (positive predictive value 100%; sensitivity 86.1%; negative predictive value 89.4%), we show that AWT1 hypermethylation also discriminates patients that relapse from those achieving complete remission after hematopoietic stem cell transplantation, with similar efficiency to WT1 expression profiling.ConclusionsWe describe a methylation signature of the AWT1 promoter CpG island that is a promising marker for classifying myeloid-derived leukemias. In addition AWT1 hypermethylation is ideally suited to monitor the recurrence of disease during remission in patients undergoing allogeneic stem cell transfer.


Leukemia & Lymphoma | 2003

Lineage-specific Chimaerism Quantification after T-cell Depleted Peripheral Blood Stem Cell Transplantation

Ismael Buño; B. Anta; E. Moreno-López; P. Balsalobre; A. Balas; F. García-Sánchez; D. Serrano; R. Carrión; A. Gómez-Pineda; J.L. Díez-Martín

Patients that receive a T-cell depleted (TCD) hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (SCT) show higher risk of graft failure/rejection and of disease relapse than those that receive unmanipulated grafts. The purpose of the present investigation was to analyze the usefulness of chimaerism quantification in bone marrow (BM), peripheral blood (PB), and leukocyte lineages such as T lymphocytes (CD3+, both CD4+ and CD8+), B lymphocytes (CD19+) and myeloid cells (CD15+), for the early detection of graft failure/rejection episodes and disease relapse after TCD-PBSCT. Two of the ten (2/10) patients included in the study showed stable complete chimaerism (CC). The other 8/10 patients showed decreasing mixed chimaerism (MC) and 7 of them had either graft failure (n =1) /rejection (n =3) or disease relapse (n =3). In two patients relapsed from chronic myeloid leukemia, MC was observed in BM and PB, with higher percentages of autologous cells in BM, as well as in leukocyte lineages, with higher percentages of recipient cells in the myeloid lineage than in lymphocytes. Combined analysis of chimaerism and minimal residual disease allowed early diagnosis of relapse and successful rescue therapy with donor leukocyte infusions (DLI), before the onset of hematological relapse. Chimaerism analysis allowed early diagnosis of incipient graft rejection in 3 patients. These patients showed MC both in BM and PB, with greater percentages of recipient cells in PB. Analysis of leukocyte lineages showed higher percentages of autologous cells in T lymphocytes (mainly CD8+) than in B or myeloid cells. Two of these patients were successfully treated with DLI and recovered normal PB counts and BM cellularity, as well as CC. The graft versus recipient hemopoiesis effect harbored by the donor immunocompetent cells infused seems useful for the treatment of graft rejection, provided that an early diagnosis is made.


Bone Marrow Transplantation | 2014

Early peripheral blood and T-cell chimerism dynamics after umbilical cord blood transplantation supported with haploidentical cells

M Kwon; Carolina Martínez-Laperche; P Balsalobre; David P. Serrano; J Anguita; J Gayoso; Jose L. Diez-Martin; Ismael Buño

Single-unit umbilical cord blood (CB) SCT is limited by low total nucleated cell (TNC) dose. Co-infusion of CD34+ cells from a third party HLA-mismatched donor, known as dual or haplo-cord transplant, reduces the period of post-transplant neutropenia and related complications. The aim of this study was to analyze the value of early post-transplant peripheral blood (PB) and T cell chimerism after 28 dual transplants regarding CB engraftment. Cumulative incidence of myeloid engraftment at 30 days was 93% with a median time to engraftment of 14 days (10–29). Patients who developed CB graft failure (n=5) showed very low percentages of CB cells on days +14, +21 and +28 with decreasing dynamics. On the other hand, percentages of CB cells in patients who achieved CB engraftment increased over time. Interestingly, such patients showed two distinct chimerism dynamics in PB, but all of them showed a predominance of CB T cells early after SCT with increasing dynamics over time. Early post-transplant chimerism dynamics in PB and T cells predicts CB graft failure enabling rapid therapeutic measures to be applied. On the other hand, early increasing percentages of CB T cells correlates with ultimate CB engraftment.


Human Pathology | 2013

Mutation of the NPM1 gene contributes to the development of donor cell–derived acute myeloid leukemia after unrelated cord blood transplantation for acute lymphoblastic leukemia

Gabriela Rodriguez-Macias; Carolina Martínez-Laperche; Jorge Gayoso; Victor Noriega; David Serrano; Pascual Balsalobre; Cristina Muñoz-Martínez; Jose L. Diez-Martin; Ismael Buño

Donor cell leukemia (DCL) is a rare but severe complication after allogeneic stem cell transplantation. Its true incidence is unknown because of a lack of correct recognition and reporting, although improvements in molecular analysis of donor-host chimerism are contributing to a better diagnosis of this complication. The mechanisms of leukemogenesis are unclear, and multiple factors can contribute to the development of DCL. In recent years, cord blood has emerged as an alternative source of hematopoietic progenitor cells, and at least 12 cases of DCL have been reported after unrelated cord blood transplantation. We report a new case of DCL after unrelated cord blood transplantation in a 44-year-old woman diagnosed as having acute lymphoblastic leukemia with t(1;19) that developed acute myeloid leukemia with normal karyotype and nucleophosmin (NPM1) mutation in donor cells. To our knowledge, this is the first report of NPM1 mutation contributing to DCL development.

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Jose L. Diez-Martin

Complutense University of Madrid

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Pascual Balsalobre

Complutense University of Madrid

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David Serrano

Spanish National Research Council

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Mi Kwon

Complutense University of Madrid

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Jorge Gayoso

Complutense University of Madrid

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Javier Anguita

Complutense University of Madrid

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David Gallardo

Autonomous University of Barcelona

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Salut Brunet

Autonomous University of Barcelona

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Ana Pérez-Corral

Complutense University of Madrid

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