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Dive into the research topics where Omar S. Aljitawi is active.

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Featured researches published by Omar S. Aljitawi.


Blood | 2011

Alternative donor transplantation after reduced intensity conditioning: Results of parallel phase 2 trials using partially HLA-mismatched related bone marrow or unrelated double umbilical cord blood grafts

Claudio G. Brunstein; Ephraim J. Fuchs; Shelly L. Carter; Chatchada Karanes; Luciano J. Costa; Juan Wu; Steven M. Devine; John R. Wingard; Omar S. Aljitawi; Corey Cutler; Madan Jagasia; Karen K. Ballen; Mary Eapen; Paul V. O'Donnell

The Blood and Marrow Transplant Clinical Trials Network conducted 2 parallel multicenter phase 2 trials for individuals with leukemia or lymphoma and no suitable related donor. Reduced intensity conditioning (RIC) was used with either unrelated double umbilical cord blood (dUCB) or HLA-haploidentical related donor bone marrow (Haplo-marrow) transplantation. For both trials, the transplantation conditioning regimen incorporated cyclophosphamide, fludarabine, and 200 cGy of total body irradiation. The 1-year probabilities of overall and progression-free survival were 54% and 46%, respectively, after dUCB transplantation (n = 50) and 62% and 48%, respectively, after Haplo-marrow transplantation (n = 50). The day +56 cumulative incidence of neutrophil recovery was 94% after dUCB and 96% after Haplo-marrow transplantation. The 100-day cumulative incidence of grade II-IV acute GVHD was 40% after dUCB and 32% after Haplo-marrow transplantation. The 1-year cumulative incidences of nonrelapse mortality and relapse after dUCB transplantation were 24% and 31%, respectively, with corresponding results of 7% and 45%, respectively, after Haplo-marrow transplantation. These multicenter studies confirm the utility of dUCB and Haplo-marrow as alternative donor sources and set the stage for a multicenter randomized clinical trial to assess the relative efficacy of these 2 strategies. The trials are registered at www.clinicaltrials.gov under NCT00864227 (BMT CTN 0604) and NCT00849147 (BMT CTN 0603).


Blood | 2015

Haploidentical transplant with posttransplant cyclophosphamide vs matched unrelated donor transplant for acute myeloid leukemia

Stefan O. Ciurea; Mei-Jie Zhang; Bacigalupo A; Frederick R. Appelbaum; Omar S. Aljitawi; Philippe Armand; Joseph H. Antin; Junfang Chen; Steven M. Devine; Daniel H. Fowler; Leo Luznik; Ryotaro Nakamura; Paul V. O'Donnell; Miguel Angel Perales; Sai Ravi Pingali; David L. Porter; Marcie Riches; Olle Ringdén; Vanderson Rocha; Ravi Vij; Daniel J. Weisdorf; Richard E. Champlin; Mary M. Horowitz; Ephraim J. Fuchs; Mary Eapen

We studied adults with acute myeloid leukemia (AML) after haploidentical (n = 192) and 8/8 HLA-matched unrelated donor (n = 1982) transplantation. Haploidentical recipients received calcineurin inhibitor (CNI), mycophenolate, and posttransplant cyclophosphamide for graft-versus-host disease (GVHD) prophylaxis; 104 patients received myeloablative and 88 received reduced intensity conditioning regimens. Matched unrelated donor transplant recipients received CNI with mycophenolate or methotrexate for GVHD prophylaxis; 1245 patients received myeloablative and 737 received reduced intensity conditioning regimens. In the myeloablative setting, day 30 neutrophil recovery was lower after haploidentical compared with matched unrelated donor transplants (90% vs 97%, P = .02). Corresponding rates after reduced intensity conditioning transplants were 93% and 96% (P = .25). In the myeloablative setting, 3-month acute grade 2-4 (16% vs 33%, P < .0001) and 3-year chronic GVHD (30% vs 53%, P < .0001) were lower after haploidentical compared with matched unrelated donor transplants. Similar differences were observed after reduced intensity conditioning transplants, 19% vs 28% (P = .05) and 34% vs 52% (P = .002). Among patients receiving myeloablative regimens, 3-year probabilities of overall survival were 45% (95% CI, 36-54) and 50% (95% CI, 47-53) after haploidentical and matched unrelated donor transplants (P = .38). Corresponding rates after reduced intensity conditioning transplants were 46% (95% CI, 35-56) and 44% (95% CI, 0.40-47) (P = .71). Although statistical power is limited, these data suggests that survival for patients with AML after haploidentical transplantation with posttransplant cyclophosphamide is comparable with matched unrelated donor transplantation.


Bone Marrow Transplantation | 2012

A risk-based approach to optimize autologous hematopoietic stem cell (HSC) collection with the use of plerixafor

Sunil Abhyankar; Shaun DeJarnette; Omar S. Aljitawi; S. Ganguly; Dean Merkel; Joseph McGuirk

Autologous hematopoietic stem cell (HSC) transplant is an effective treatment for patients with hematological malignancies. Unfortunately, 15–30% of patients fail to mobilize a sufficient number of HSCs for the transplant. Plerixafor is now used as a salvage mobilization regimen, with good success. We describe here a risk-based approach for the use of plerixafor, based on the circulating CD34+ cell count and the CD34+ cell dose collected after 4 days of G-CSF, that identifies potential poor HSC mobilizers upfront. A total of 159 patients underwent HSC collections using this approach. Of these, 55 (35%) were identified as high risk owing to low CD34+ cell number or low yield on day 1 of collection, and received plerixafor on the subsequent days of collection. Of the 159 patients, 151 (95%) were able to provide adequate collections with the first mobilization attempt in a median of 1.7 days using this approach. Of the eight who failed initial mobilization, 5 successfully underwent re-mobilization with plerixafor and G-CSF and 3 (1.9%) were mobilization failures. This approach helped to control the overall cost of HSC collections for our BMT program by decreasing the need for remobilization, reducing the number of collection days and avoiding the use of plerixafor in all patients.


Pharmacotherapy | 2013

Preclinical and phase i results of decitabine in combination with midostaurin (PKC412) for newly diagnosed elderly or relapsed/refractory adult patients with acute myeloid leukemia

Casey Williams; Suman Kambhampati; Warren Fiskus; Jo Wick; Catherine Dutreix; Siddartha Ganguly; Omar S. Aljitawi; Ruben Reyes; Allan Fleming; Sunil Abhyankar; Kapil N. Bhalla; Joseph McGuirk

To determine the preclinical activity, clinical maximum tolerated dose (MTD), and recommended phase II dose of midostaurin (MS) combined either sequentially or concurrently with intravenous decitabine (DAC) in newly diagnosed patients 60 years or older or relapsed/refractory adult patients (18 years or older) with acute myeloid leukemia (AML).


Leukemia & Lymphoma | 2014

A novel three-dimensional stromal-based model for in vitro chemotherapy sensitivity testing of leukemia cells.

Omar S. Aljitawi; Dandan Li; Yinghua Xiao; Da Zhang; Lisa Stehno-Bittel; Peter Van Veldhuizen; Tara L. Lin; Suman Kambhampati; Rama Garimella

Abstract The disparate response of leukemia cells to chemotherapy in vivo, compared to in vitro, is partly related to the interaction of leukemic cells and the three-dimensional bone marrow stromal microenvironment. We investigated the effects of chemotherapy agents on leukemic cell lines co-cultured with human bone marrow mesenchymal stem cells (hu-BM-MSCs) in a three-dimensional model (3D). Comparison was made to leukemic cells treated in suspension, or grown on a hu-BM-MSC monolayer (2D conditions). We demonstrated that leukemic cells cultured in 3D were more resistant to drug-induced apoptosis compared to cells cultured in 2D or in suspension. We also demonstrated significant differences in leukemic cell response to chemotherapy using different leukemic cell lines cultured in 3D. We suggest that the differential responses to chemotherapy in 3D may be related to the expression of N-cadherin in the co-culture system. This unique model provides an opportunity to study leukemic cell responses to chemotherapy in 3D.


Bone Marrow Transplantation | 2016

Fatal GvHD induced by PD-1 inhibitor pembrolizumab in a patient with Hodgkin's lymphoma.

Anurag K. Singh; L F Porrata; Omar S. Aljitawi; Tara Lin; Leyla Shune; S. Ganguly; Joseph McGuirk; Sunil Abhyankar

290. 10 Armand P, Nagler A, Weller EA, Devine SM, Avigan DE, Chen Y-B et al. Disabling immune tolerance by programmed death-1 blockade with pidilizumab after autologous hematopoietic stem-cell transplantation for diffuse large B-cell lymphoma: results of an international Phase ii trial. J Clin Oncol 2013; 31: 4199–4206. 11 Villasboas JC, Ansell SM, Witzig TE. Targeting the PD-1 pathway in patients with relapsed classic Hodgkin lymphoma following allogeneic stem cell transplant is safe and effective. Oncotarget (e-pub ahead of print 3 February 2016; doi:10.18632/oncotarget.7177). 12 Mori S, Ahmed W, Patel RD, Dohrer AL. Steroid refractory acute liver GvHD in a Hodgkins patient after allogeneic stem transplant cell transplantation following treatment with anti PD-1 antibody, nivolumab, for relapsed disease. Biol Blood Marrow Transplant 22: S392–S393. ABVD (6 cycles) ICE x 2 Autologous transplant: BEAM Brentuximab Allogeneic transplant: Flu/TBI Brentuximab Pembrolizumab Death from GVHD Diagnosis 7 Months relapse 10 Months 27 Months progression 31 Months 43 Months relapse 58 Months relapse 60 Months death Figure 1. Clinical course of the patient. Letter to the Editor


Clinical Transplantation | 2012

Prophylactic use of zoledronic acid to prevent early bone loss is safe and feasible in patients with acute myeloid leukemia undergoing allogeneic stem cell transplantation

Siddhartha Ganguly; Clint L. Divine; Omar S. Aljitawi; Sunil Abhyankar; Joseph McGuirk; Leland Graves

Ganguly S, Divine CL, Aljitawi OS, Abhyankar S, McGuirk JP, Graves L. Prophylactic use of zoledronic acid to prevent early bone loss is safe and feasible in patients with acute myeloid leukemia undergoing allogeneic stem cell transplantation. 
Clin Transplant 2011 DOI: 10.1111/j.1399‐0012.2011.01527.x. 
© 2011 John Wiley & Sons A/S.


Blood | 2011

Alternative donor transplantation: results of parallel phase II trials using HLA-mismatched related bone marrow or unrelated umbilical cord blood grafts

Claudio G. Brunstein; Ephraim J. Fuchs; Shelly L. Carter; Chatchada Karanes; Luciano J. Costa; Juan Wu; Steven M. Devine; John R. Wingard; Omar S. Aljitawi; Corey Cutler; Madan Jagasia; Karen K. Ballen; Mary Eapen; Paul V. O'Donnell

The Blood and Marrow Transplant Clinical Trials Network conducted 2 parallel multicenter phase 2 trials for individuals with leukemia or lymphoma and no suitable related donor. Reduced intensity conditioning (RIC) was used with either unrelated double umbilical cord blood (dUCB) or HLA-haploidentical related donor bone marrow (Haplo-marrow) transplantation. For both trials, the transplantation conditioning regimen incorporated cyclophosphamide, fludarabine, and 200 cGy of total body irradiation. The 1-year probabilities of overall and progression-free survival were 54% and 46%, respectively, after dUCB transplantation (n = 50) and 62% and 48%, respectively, after Haplo-marrow transplantation (n = 50). The day +56 cumulative incidence of neutrophil recovery was 94% after dUCB and 96% after Haplo-marrow transplantation. The 100-day cumulative incidence of grade II-IV acute GVHD was 40% after dUCB and 32% after Haplo-marrow transplantation. The 1-year cumulative incidences of nonrelapse mortality and relapse after dUCB transplantation were 24% and 31%, respectively, with corresponding results of 7% and 45%, respectively, after Haplo-marrow transplantation. These multicenter studies confirm the utility of dUCB and Haplo-marrow as alternative donor sources and set the stage for a multicenter randomized clinical trial to assess the relative efficacy of these 2 strategies. The trials are registered at www.clinicaltrials.gov under NCT00864227 (BMT CTN 0604) and NCT00849147 (BMT CTN 0603).


Bone Marrow Transplantation | 2014

Phase IIa cross-over study of propylene glycol-free melphalan (LGD-353) and alkeran in multiple myeloma autologous transplantation

Omar S. Aljitawi; S. Ganguly; Sunil Abhyankar; M Ferree; R Marks; J D Pipkin; Joseph McGuirk

Propylene Glycol-Free melphalan HCL for Injection (PGF-Mel) is a new formulation that incorporates Captisol, a specially modified cyclodextrin, to improve melphalan stability. In this phase IIa, open-label, randomized, cross-over design bioequivalence study, the pharmacokinetics of PGF-Mel were compared with the marketed formulation of melphalan, or Alkeran. Patients received half of the total dose of melphalan in the form of Alkeran and the other half in the form of PGF-Mel in an alternating manner. The pharmacokinetic measures were determined using WinNonlin 6.2 and bioequivalence was assessed using log-transformed systemic exposure parameters. Twenty-four patients, 11 females and 13 males, were enrolled between 4 February 2010 and 16 May 2011 at The University of Kansas Medical Center and The University of Kansas Cancer Center. The median age of enrolled subjects was 58 years (range: 48–65). All patients achieved myeloablation 3 days post autologous graft followed by successful neutrophil engraftment with a median of 11 days after transplant. Pharmacokinetic analysis showed that PGF-Mel was bioequivalent with Alkeran and also revealed that maximum plasma concentration (Cmax) and area under the plasma concentration−time curve (AUC) were higher (~10%) after PGF-Mel administration. In conclusion, PGF-Mel is considered bioequivalent to Alkeran while also demonstrating a marginally higher systemic drug exposure.


Annals of Hematology | 2014

Pulmonary manifestations of the pre-engraftment syndrome after umbilical cord blood transplantation

Kyle R. Brownback; Steven Q. Simpson; Joseph McGuirk; Tara L. Lin; Sunil Abhyankar; Siddhartha Ganguly; Omar S. Aljitawi

Pre-engraftment syndrome (PES) is a condition occurring after umbilical cord blood transplantation (UCBT) characterized by fever and erythematous skin rash prior to neutrophil engraftment. We sought to determine the incidence and characterize the pulmonary manifestations of PES. A retrospective review of patients who underwent UCBT at the University of Kansas Medical Center over a 5-year period was performed. Data collected included patient baseline characteristics, presence of PES, pulmonary findings, treatments, and survival. Forty-four patients underwent UCBT with 22 of those patients developing PES. Full-intensity myeloablative conditioning regimen was found to be a risk factor for development of PES. Of those 22 patients, 13 had resting hypoxemia. The most common radiographic findings included diffuse ground glass opacities with pleural effusions. Fifteen patients with PES received corticosteroids, of which 12 had improvement in fevers and rash. These patients had a trend toward worse mortality than those not receiving corticosteroids. There was a nonsignificant trend toward worse survival in patients with PES and hypoxemia compared to those without hypoxemia. PES is a common complication following cord blood transplantation, with hypoxemia being present in over half of patients with PES. Hypoxemia with PES and treatment with corticosteroids may portend a worse prognosis.

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Tara Lin

University of Kansas

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