Lawrence Faulkner
Boston Children's Hospital
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Featured researches published by Lawrence Faulkner.
Blood | 2010
Pietro Sodani; Antonella Isgrò; Javid Gaziev; Paola Polchi; Katia Paciaroni; Marco Marziali; Maria Domenica Simone; Andrea Roveda; Aldo Montuoro; Cecilia Alfieri; Gioia De Angelis; Cristiano Gallucci; Buket Erer; Giancarlo Isacchi; Francesco Zinno; Gaspare Adorno; Alessandro Lanti; Lawrence Faulkner; Manuela Testi; Marco Andreani; Guido Lucarelli
Fetomaternal microchimerism suggests immunological tolerance between mother and fetus. Thus, we performed primary hematopoietic stem cell transplantation from a mismatched mother to thalassemic patient without an human leukocyte antigen-identical donor. Twenty-two patients with thalassemia major were conditioned with 60 mg/kg hydroxyurea and 3 mg/kg azathioprine from day -59 to -11; 30 mg/m(2) fludarabine from day -17 to -11; 14 mg/kg busulfan starting on day -10; and 200 mg/kg cyclophosphamide, 10 mg/kg thiotepa, and 12.5 mg/kg antithymocyte globulin daily from day -5 to -2. Fourteen patients received CD34(+)-mobilized peripheral blood and bone marrow progenitor cells; 8 patients received marrow graft-selected peripheral blood stem cells CD34(+) and bone marrow CD3/CD19-depleted cells. T-cell dose was adjusted to 2 x 10(5)/kg by fresh marrow cell addback at the time of transplantation. Both groups received cyclosporine for graft-versus-host disease prophylaxis for 2 months after transplantation. Two patients died (cerebral Epstein-Barr virus lymphoma or cytomegalovirus pneumonia), 6 patients reject their grafts, and 14 showed full chimerism with functioning grafts at a median follow-up of 40 months. None of the 14 patients who showed full chimerism developed acute or chronic graft-versus-host disease. These results suggest that maternal haploidentical hematopoietic stem cell transplantation is feasible in patients with thalassemia who lack a matched related donor.
Journal of Pediatric Hematology Oncology | 2013
Lawrence Faulkner; Cornelio Uderzo; Giuseppe Masera
Thalassemia major (TM) is the most frequent life-threatening noninfectious disease of childhood in the Middle East, South Asia, and Pacific Islands where it accounts for a significant proportion of childhood mortality, morbidity, and related health care expenses. In spite of major advances in supportive care during the last decade, many patients in low-income and middle-income countries still fare poorly because of high treatment costs and lack of accessible multidisciplinary teams, not to consider the risk of blood-borne infections, primarily hepatitis C. In selected low-risk patients with a compatible sibling, TM is highly curable by bone marrow transplantation (BMT), which also improves the quality of life and is cost-effective. Starting in 2008, the Cure2Children Foundation (C2C), an Italian Non-Governmental Organization, has supported a BMT network in Pakistan, which during 2012 was extended to India. The primary aim of this project was to assess feasibility, outcomes, and costs of matched-related BMT for thalassemia in young low-risk children using a well-established and tolerable strategy. A total of 100 matched-related BMTs have been performed to date by partner institutions within this C2C-supported network; in the 50 low-risk cases with TM, over 90% disease-free survival was obtained with procedure expenses within 10,000 USD/BMT, that is, an outcome comparable to that obtained in affluent countries but with a fraction of the expenses. This cure rate was also obtained in start-up BMT centers (1 in Pakistan and 1 in India) within a structured and intensive cooperation program. Twinning and other international cooperation strategies based on shared principles and a common vision may substantially facilitate access to BMT.
Journal of the American Medical Informatics Association | 2014
Rajat Kumar Agarwal; Amit Sedai; Sunil Dhimal; Kumari Ankita; Luigi Clemente; Sulman Siddique; Naila Yaqub; Sadaf Khalid; Fatima Itrat; Anwar Khan; Sarah Khan Gilani; Priya Marwah; Rajpreet Soni; Mohamed El Missiry; Mohamed Hamed Hussain; Cornelio Uderzo; Lawrence Faulkner
Jagriti Innovations developed a collaboration tool in partnership with the Cure2Children Foundation that has been used by health professionals in Italy, Pakistan, and India for the collaborative management of patients undergoing bone marrow transplantation (BMT) for thalassemia major since August 2008. This online open-access database covers data recording, analyzing, and reporting besides enabling knowledge exchange, telemedicine, capacity building, and quality assurance. As of February 2014, over 2400 patients have been registered and 112 BMTs have been performed with outcomes comparable to international standards, but at a fraction of the cost. This approach avoids medical emigration and contributes to local healthcare strengthening and competitiveness. This paper presents the experience and clinical outcomes associated with the use of this platform built using open-source tools and focusing on a locally pertinent tertiary care procedure—BMT.
Biology of Blood and Marrow Transplantation | 2017
Rajat Kumar Agarwal; Ankita Kumari; Amit Sedai; Lalith Parmar; Rakesh Dhanya; Lawrence Faulkner
Three-loci low-resolution (LR) or intermediate-resolution HLA typing is generally considered adequate in the related blood and marrow transplantation (BMT) context. However, a single high-resolution (HR) mismatch may have a similar adverse impact on BMT outcome as an LR one. We sought to determine the frequency of mismatches that may go undetected when standard typing (LR or 3-loci HR) is used compared with 6-loci HR typing for related donor compatibility testing, and to assess its impact on relevant BMT outcomes. We analyzed data from a total of 2554 6-loci (HLA-A, -B, -C, -DRB1, -DQB1, and -DPB1) HR sequence-based typing (full typing [FT]) from 754 patients, 1011 siblings, and 789 parents done at DKMS Germany (www.DKMS.de) between January 1, 2014, and June 21, 2016. We also studied 38 cases in which the family had undergone 3-loci HLA typing (standard typing [ST]). Patients were from India (70%), Pakistan (22%), and Sri Lanka (8%). The IMGT/HLA database (www.ebi.ac.uk/ipd/imgt/hla) was used to tease out nonpermissive DPB1 mismatches. HLA disparity-related outcomes, such as rejection and graft-versus-host disease (GVHD) were assessed in a retrospective matched-pair cohort of 50 patients (25 with ST and 25 with FT) who underwent BMT for severe thalassemia from compatible related donors. We found fully matched (either 12/12 HR matches or with a single permissive DPB1 mismatch) related donors for 285 patients (38%). Of these donors, 89% were siblings and 11% were parents. The likelihood of matching on an individual locus on LR but not on HR was found to be 5%. A total of 9 donors (3%; 7 siblings and 2 parents) who would have been considered a full match by HR typing on A, B, and DRB1 alone were not a match by extended 6-loci HR typing. Five of these 9 donors had a mismatch on C or DQB1, and 4 had a nonpermissive DPB1 mismatch. In this group, 5 donors (56%) belonged to a consanguineous family, in 2 donors (22%) there was no reported consanguinity, and in 2 donors (22%) consanguinity was unknown. We identified 18 donors (6%; 13 siblings and 5 parents) who would have been considered a 12/12 match by LR HLA typing alone but were found not to match on extended HR typing. In this group, 11 donors (61%) were from consanguineous families, 3 donors (17%) had no reported consanguinity, and in 4 donors (22%) consanguinity was unknown. Outcome analysis showed that the actuarial proportion of patients with GVHD was 4% in the FT group compared with 16% in the ST group, with log-rank P = .1952. The ST group included 2 patients with grade III-IV acute GVHD and 1 patient each with moderate and severe chronic GVHD, whereas the FT group only 1 patient with grade III acute GVHD. We conclude that even in the context of related donors, the use of LR and/or 3-loci (A, B, and DRB1) HR HLA typing might result in a sizable risk of missing a clinically relevant mismatch, which may have an adverse impact on transplantation outcomes. In the Indian subcontinent, this observation is not limited to putatively compatible parents or consanguineous families; we recommend full 6-loci HR HLA typing even for matched related BMTs.
JMIR medical informatics | 2017
Rajat Kumar Agarwal; Amit Sedai; Kumari Ankita; Lalith Parmar; Rakesh Dhanya; Sunil Dhimal; Reshma Shriniwas; Ashwini Gowda; Pooja Gujjal; Pushpa H; Suman Jain; J. Dasaratha Ramaiah; Sujata Jali; Neelavva Rayappa Tallur; Stalin Ramprakash; Lawrence Faulkner
Background Successful models of information and communication technology (ICT) applied to cost-effective delivery of quality care in low- and middle-income countries (LMIC) are an increasing necessity. Severe thalassemia is one of the most common life-threatening noncommunicable diseases of children globally. Objective The aim was to study the impact of ICT on quality of care for severe thalassemia patients in LMIC. Methods A total of 1110 patients with severe thalassemia from five centers in India were followed over a 1-year period. The impact of consistent use of a Web-based platform designed to assist comprehensive management of severe thalassemia (ThalCare) on key indicators of quality of care such as minimum (pretransfusion) hemoglobin, serum ferritin, liver size, and spleen size were assessed. Results Overall improvements in initial hemoglobin, ferritin, and liver and spleen size were significant (P<.001 for each). For four centers, the improvement in mean pretransfusion hemoglobin level was statistically significant (P<.001). Four of five centers achieved reduction in mean ferritin levels, with two displaying a significant drop in ferritin (P=.004 and P<.001). One of the five centers did not record liver and spleen size on palpation, but of the remaining four centers, two witnessed a large drop in liver and spleen size (P<.01), one witnessed moderate drop (P=.05 for liver; P=.03 for spleen size), while the fourth witnessed a moderate increase in liver size (P=.08) and insignificant change in spleen size (P=.12). Conclusions Implementation of computer-assisted treatment planning and performance assessment consistently and positively impacted indexes reflecting effective delivery of care to patients suffering from severe thalassemia in LMIC.
Anemia | 2014
Mohamed El Missiry; Mohamed Hamed Hussein; Sadaf Khalid; Naila Yaqub; Sarah Khan; Fatima Itrat; Cornelio Uderzo; Lawrence Faulkner
Thalassemia Reports | 2012
Lawrence Faulkner; Naila Yaqub; S. Khalid Khalid; T. Zhara; Saqib Ansari; Tasneem Farzana; Tahir Shamsi
Pediatric Hematology Oncology Journal | 2017
Rajat Kumar Agarwal; Amit Sedai; Kumari Ankita; Lalith Parmar; Rakesh Dhanya; Sunil Dhimal; Reshma Shriniwas; Sumithra P; Hemanth V. Iyer; Ashwini Gowda; Pooja Gujjal; Pradeep R; Pushpa H; Suman Jain; Saroja Kondaveeti; J. Dasaratha Ramaiah; Raviteja; Hariharanatha Sharma; Sujata Jali; Shrikant Viragi; Shreedevi Bobati; Neelavva Rayappa Tallur; Stalin Ramprakash; Lawrence Faulkner
Thalassemia Reports | 2013
Mohamed Hamed Hussein; Mohamed El Missiry; Sadaf Khalid; Naila Yaqub; Sarah Khan Gilani; Itrat Fatima; Tatheer Zara; Priya Marwah; Rajpreet Soni; Frederic Bernard; Annunziata Manna; Cornelio Uderzo; Lawrence Faulkner
Pediatric Hematology Oncology Journal | 2017
Stalin Ramprakash; Rajat Kumar Agarwal; Rakesh Dhanya; Priya Marwah; Rajpreet Soni; Naila Yaqub; Itrat Fatima; Lallindra Gooneratne; Senani Williams; Sadaf Khalid; Santanu Sen; Lawrence Faulkner