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Dive into the research topics where Richard J. O'Reilly is active.

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Featured researches published by Richard J. O'Reilly.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 1994

Infusions of Donor Leukocytes to Treat Epstein-Barr Virus-Associated Lymphoproliferative Disorders after Allogeneic Bone Marrow Transplantation

Esperanza B. Papadopoulos; Marc Ladanyi; David Emanuel; Stephen Mackinnon; Farid Boulad; Matthew H. Carabasi; Hugo Castro-Malaspina; Barrett H. Childs; Alfred P. Gillio; Trudy N. Small; James W. Young; Nancy A. Kernan; Richard J. O'Reilly

BACKGROUND Lymphoma associated with Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) is a complication of bone marrow transplantation that responds poorly to standard forms of therapy. The lymphoma is usually of donor origin. We hypothesized that treatment with infusions of donor leukocytes, which contain cytotoxic T cells presensitized to EBV, might be an effective treatment. METHODS We studied five patients in whom EBV-associated lymphoproliferative disorders developed after they received a T-cell-depleted allogeneic bone marrow transplant. Biopsy specimens were immunophenotyped, subjected to the polymerase chain reaction to determine the origin of the lymphoma (donor or host) and to detect the presence of EBV, and analyzed by Southern blotting for the presence of the clonal EBV genome and immunoglobulin-gene rearrangement. Patients were treated with infusions of unirradiated donor leukocytes at doses calculated to provide approximately 1.0 x 10(6) CD3+ T cells per kilogram of body weight. RESULTS Histopathological examination of biopsy specimens from all five patients demonstrated monomorphic, malignant lymphomas of B-cell origin. Each of the four specimens that could be evaluated was of donor-cell origin. Evidence of clonality was found in two of the three samples adequate for study. EBV DNA was detected by the polymerase chain reaction in all five samples. In all five patients there were complete pathological or clinical responses. The responses were first documented histologically within 8 to 21 days after infusion. Clinical remissions were achieved within 14 to 30 days after the infusions and were sustained without further therapy in the three surviving patients for 10, 16, and 16 months. CONCLUSIONS In a small number of patients, infusions of unirradiated donor leukocytes were an effective treatment for EBV-associated lymphoproliferative disease that arose after allogeneic bone marrow transplantation.


Nature | 1999

Id1 and Id3 are required for neurogenesis, angiogenesis and vascularization of tumour xenografts

David Lyden; Alison Z. Young; David Zagzag; Wei Yan; William L. Gerald; Richard J. O'Reilly; Bernhard L. Bader; Richard O. Hynes; Yuan Zhuang; Katia Manova; Robert Benezra

Id proteins may control cell differentiation by interfering with DNA binding of transcription factors. Here we show that targeted disruption of the dominant negative helix–loop–helix proteins Id1 and Id3 in mice results in premature withdrawal of neuroblasts from the cell cycle and expression of neural-specific differentiation markers. The Id1–Id3 double knockout mice also display vascular malformations in the forebrain and an absence of branching and sprouting of blood vessels into the neuroectoderm. As angiogenesis both in the brain and in tumours requires invasion of avascular tissue by endothelial cells, we examined the Id knockout mice for their ability to support the growth of tumour xenografts. Three different tumours failed to grow and/or metastasize in Id1+/-Id3-/- mice, and any tumour growth present showed poor vascularization and extensive necrosis. Thus, the Id genes are required to maintain the timing of neuronal differentiation in the embryo and invasiveness of the vasculature. Because the Id genes are expressed at very low levels in adults, they make attractive new targets for anti-angiogenic drug design.


Annals of Internal Medicine | 1988

Cytomegalovirus Pneumonia after Bone Marrow Transplantation Successfully Treated with the Combination of Ganciclovir and High-Dose Intravenous Immune Globulin

David Emanuel; Isabel Cunningham; Kethy Jules-Elysee; Joel A. Brochstein; Nancy A. Kernan; Joseph H. Laver; Diane E. Stover; Dorothy A. White; Anna O. S. Fels; Bruce Polsky; Hugo Castro-Malaspina; Patricia Bartus; Ulrich Hämmerling; Richard J. O'Reilly

STUDY OBJECTIVE To assess the efficacy of the combination of the antiviral agent ganciclovir (9-1,3 dihydroxy-2-propoxymethylguanine) and high-dose intravenous immune globulin for treating cytomegalovirus interstitial pneumonitis after allogeneic bone marrow transplantation. DESIGN Nonrandomized prospective trial of combined treatment with two drugs; findings in these patients were compared with those in control patients treated with either of the two drugs alone. SETTING Medical, pediatric, and intensive care units of a tertiary-care cancer treatment center. PATIENTS Consecutive cases of 10 patients in the study group and of 11 patients in a historical control group with evidence of cytomegalovirus pneumonia after bone marrow transplantation for treatment of leukemia or congenital immune deficiency. INTERVENTIONS Study Group (10 patients): ganciclovir, 2.5 mg/kg body weight, three times daily for 20 days, plus intravenous immune globulin, 500 mg/kg every other day for ten doses. Patients were then given ganciclovir, 5 mg/kg.d three to five times a week for 20 more doses, and intravenous immune globulin, 500 mg/kg twice a week for 8 more doses. Control Group (11 patients): ganciclovir alone (2 patients), 5 mg/kg twice a day for 14 to 21 days; cytomegalovirus hyperimmune globulin (5 patients), 400 mg/kg.d for 10 days; and intravenous immune globulin (4 patients), 400 mg/kg.d for 10 days. MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS Responses were observed in all patients treated with combination therapy; 7 of 10 patients were alive and well, and had no recurrence of disease at a median of 10 months after therapy. No therapeutic benefit was observed, and none of the 11 patients treated with either ganciclovir or intravenous immune globulin alone survived (P = 0.001 by Fisher exact test). CONCLUSIONS Ganciclovir, when combined with high-dose intravenous immune globulin, appears to have significantly altered the outcome of patients with cytomegalovirus pneumonia after allogeneic bone marrow transplantation.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 1989

Effects of Recombinant Human Granulocyte Colony-Stimulating Factor on Neutropenia in Patients with Congenital Agranulocytosis

Mary Ann Bonilla; Alfred P. Gillio; Mary Ruggeiro; Nancy A. Kernan; Joel A. Brochstein; Miguel R. Abboud; Luca Fumagalli; Martha Vincent; Janice Gabrilove; Karl Welte; Lawrence Souza; Richard J. O'Reilly

Congenital agranulocytosis is a disorder characterized by severe neutropenia and a profound deficiency of identifiable neutrophil progenitors in bone marrow. In an attempt to stimulate neutrophil production and thereby reduce the morbidity and mortality associated with this disease, we administered recombinant human granulocyte colony-stimulating factor (rhG-CSF) in doses of 3 to 60 micrograms per kilogram of body weight per day to five patients with congenital agranulocytosis. In all five patients, an increase in the number of neutrophils was noted eight to nine days after the initiation of the effective dosage (the dose at which the neutrophil count reached 1000 cells per microliter or more and the bone marrow showed granulocyte maturation beyond the myelocyte stage). The absolute neutrophil counts rose from less than 100 to between 1300 and 9500 cells per microliter. Marrow aspirates obtained after 14 days at the effective dosage showed maturation to the mature neutrophil stage. The side effects that were observed were medullary pain, splenomegaly, and an elevation of levels of leukocyte alkaline phosphatase. All five patients have had sustained neutrophil counts of 1000 cells per microliter or more for 9 to 13 months while receiving subcutaneous maintenance therapy. Preexisting chronic infections have resolved clinically, and the number of new infectious episodes and the requirement for intravenous antibiotics have decreased. We conclude that treatment with rhG-CSF can lead to a large increase in the numbers of functional neutrophils in patients with congenital agranulocytosis.


Journal of Immunology | 2003

Evasion from NK cell immunity by MHC class I chain-related molecules expressing colon adenocarcinoma.

Ekaterina Doubrovina; Mikhail Doubrovin; Elena Vider; Richard B. Sisson; Richard J. O'Reilly; Bo Dupont; Yatin M. Vyas

Evasion of host immune responses is well documented for viruses and may also occur during tumor immunosurveillance. The mechanisms involve alterations in MHC class I expression, Ag processing and presentation, chemokine and cytokine production, and lymphocyte receptor expression. Epithelial tumors overexpress MHC class I chain-related (MIC) molecules, which are ligands for the activating receptor NKG2D on NK and T cells. We report that NK cells from patients with colorectal cancer lack expression of activating NKG2D and chemokine CXCR1 receptors, both of which are internalized. Serum levels of soluble MIC (sMIC) are elevated and are responsible for down-modulation of NKG2D and CXCR1. In contrast, high serum levels of CXC ligands, IL-8, and epithelial-neutrophil-activating peptide (ENA-78) do not down-modulate CXCR1. In vitro, internalization of NKG2D and CXCR1 occurs within 4 and 24 h, respectively, of incubating normal NK cells with sMIC-containing serum. Furthermore, natural cytotoxicity receptor NKp44 and chemokine receptor CCR7 are also down-modulated in IL-2-activated NK cells cocultured in MIC-containing serum—an effect secondary to the down-modulation of NKG2D and not directly caused by physical association with sMIC. The patients’ NK cells up-regulate expression of NKG2D, NKp44, CXCR1, and CCR7 when cultured in normal serum or anti-MIC Ab-treated autologous serum. NKG2D+ but not NKG2D− NK cells are tumoricidal in vitro, and in vivo they selectively traffic to the xenografted carcinoma, form immunological synapse with tumor cells, and significantly retard tumor growth in the SCID mice. These results suggest that circulating sMIC in the cancer patients deactivates NK immunity by down-modulating important activating and chemokine receptors.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 2014

Transplantation Outcomes for Severe Combined Immunodeficiency, 2000–2009

Sung-Yun Pai; Brent R. Logan; Linda M. Griffith; Rebecca H. Buckley; Roberta E. Parrott; Christopher C. Dvorak; Neena Kapoor; Imelda C. Hanson; Alexandra H. Filipovich; Soma Jyonouchi; Kathleen E. Sullivan; Trudy N. Small; Lauri Burroughs; Suzanne Skoda-Smith; Ann E. Haight; Audrey Grizzle; Michael A. Pulsipher; Ka Wah Chan; Ramsay L. Fuleihan; Elie Haddad; Brett Loechelt; Victor M. Aquino; Alfred P. Gillio; Jeffrey H. Davis; Alan P. Knutsen; Angela Smith; Theodore B. Moore; Marlis L. Schroeder; Frederick D. Goldman; James A. Connelly

BACKGROUND The Primary Immune Deficiency Treatment Consortium was formed to analyze the results of hematopoietic-cell transplantation in children with severe combined immunodeficiency (SCID) and other primary immunodeficiencies. Factors associated with a good transplantation outcome need to be identified in order to design safer and more effective curative therapy, particularly for children with SCID diagnosed at birth. METHODS We collected data retrospectively from 240 infants with SCID who had received transplants at 25 centers during a 10-year period (2000 through 2009). RESULTS Survival at 5 years, freedom from immunoglobulin substitution, and CD3+ T-cell and IgA recovery were more likely among recipients of grafts from matched sibling donors than among recipients of grafts from alternative donors. However, the survival rate was high regardless of donor type among infants who received transplants at 3.5 months of age or younger (94%) and among older infants without prior infection (90%) or with infection that had resolved (82%). Among actively infected infants without a matched sibling donor, survival was best among recipients of haploidentical T-cell-depleted transplants in the absence of any pretransplantation conditioning. Among survivors, reduced-intensity or myeloablative pretransplantation conditioning was associated with an increased likelihood of a CD3+ T-cell count of more than 1000 per cubic millimeter, freedom from immunoglobulin substitution, and IgA recovery but did not significantly affect CD4+ T-cell recovery or recovery of phytohemagglutinin-induced T-cell proliferation. The genetic subtype of SCID affected the quality of CD3+ T-cell recovery but not survival. CONCLUSIONS Transplants from donors other than matched siblings were associated with excellent survival among infants with SCID identified before the onset of infection. All available graft sources are expected to lead to excellent survival among asymptomatic infants. (Funded by the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases and others.).


The New England Journal of Medicine | 1987

Allogeneic Bone Marrow Transplantation after Hyperfractionated Total-Body Irradiation and Cyclophosphamide in Children with Acute Leukemia

Joel A. Brochstein; Nancy A. Kernan; Susan Groshen; Constance Cirrincione; Brenda Shank; David Emanuel; Joseph H. Laver; Richard J. O'Reilly

Ninety-seven children with either acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) or acute myelogenous leukemia (AML) received HLA-identical bone marrow transplants from sibling donors, after preparation with 1320 cGy of hyperfractionated total-body irradiation and high-dose cyclophosphamide. Kaplan-Meier product-limit estimates (means +/- SE) of disease-free survival at five years among patients with ALL in second remission, third remission, and fourth remission or relapse were 64 +/- 9, 42 +/- 14, and 23 +/- 11 percent, respectively, with probabilities of relapse of 13 +/- 7, 25 +/- 13, and 64 +/- 16 percent. Among patients with AML in first remission, second remission, and third remission or relapse, five-year disease-free survival estimates were 66 +/- 10, 75 +/- 15, and 33 +/- 19 percent, with respective relapse probabilities of 0, 13 +/- 12, and 67 +/- 19 percent. The most frequent cause of death in patients in early remission (ALL in second or third remission or AML in first or second remission) was bacterial sepsis, fungal sepsis, or both, most often in the presence of acute or chronic graft-versus-host disease. Among patients with ALL who received transplants while in second remission, the duration of the initial remission had no effect on the probability of relapse after transplantation. The only pretransplantation factor that significantly affected outcome was the disease status at the time of transplantation; patients in early remission had better disease-free survival. We conclude that transplantation after preparation with hyperfractionated total-body irradiation and cyclophosphamide is an effective mode of therapy in children with refractory forms of acute leukemia.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 1982

Identification by HLA Typing of Intrauterine-Derived Maternal T Cells in Four Patients with Severe Combined Immunodeficiency

Marilyn S. Pollack; Dahlia Kirkpatrick; Neena Kapoor; Bo Dupont; Richard J. O'Reilly

AFTER our initial observation in 1978 of engraftment of nonfunctional intrauterine-derived maternal T cells in a patient with severe combined immunodeficiency without graft-versus-host disease,1 , ...


Annals of Internal Medicine | 1989

Transfusion-Associated Acute Chagas Disease Acquired in the United States

Irene H. Grant; Jonathan W. M. Gold; Murray Wittner; Herbert B. Tanowitz; Carl Nathan; Klaus Mayer; L Reich; Norma Wollner; Laurel J. Steinherz; Fereshteh Ghavimi; Richard J. O'Reilly; Donald Armstrong

Excerpt Although a significant problem in Latin America (1), the transmission ofTrypanosoma cruziinfection by transfusion has not been unequivocally documented in the United States. We report a cas...


Blood | 2012

Adoptive immunotherapy with unselected or EBV-specific T cells for biopsy-proven EBV+ lymphomas after allogeneic hematopoietic cell transplantation.

Ekaterina Doubrovina; Banu Oflaz-Sozmen; Susan E. Prockop; Nancy A. Kernan; Sara J. Abramson; Julie Teruya-Feldstein; Cyrus V. Hedvat; Joanne F. Chou; Glenn Heller; Juliet N. Barker; Farid Boulad; Hugo Castro-Malaspina; Diane George; Ann A. Jakubowski; Guenther Koehne; Esperanza B. Papadopoulos; Andromachi Scaradavou; Trudy N. Small; Ramzi Khalaf; James W. Young; Richard J. O'Reilly

We evaluated HLA-compatible donor leukocyte infusions (DLIs) and HLA-compatible or HLA-disparate EBV-specific T cells (EBV-CTLs) in 49 hematopoietic cell transplantation recipients with biopsy-proven EBV-lymphoproliferative disease (EBV-LPD). DLIs and EBV-CTLs each induced durable complete or partial remissions in 73% and 68% of treated patients including 74% and 72% of patients surviving ≥ 8 days after infusion, respectively. Reversible acute GVHD occurred in recipients of DLIs (17%) but not EBV-CTLs. The probability of complete response was significantly lower among patients with multiorgan involvement. In responders, DLIs and EBV-CTLs regularly induced exponential increases in EBV-specific CTL precursor (EBV-CTLp) frequencies within 7-14 days, with subsequent clearance of EBV viremia and resolution of disease. In nonresponders, EBV-CTLps did not increase and EBV viremia persisted. Treatment failures were correlated with impaired T-cell recognition of tumor targets. Either donor-derived EBV-CTLs that had been sensitized with autologous BLCLs transformed by EBV strain B95.8 could not lyse spontaneous donor-derived EBV-transformed BLCLs expanded from the patients blood or biopsied tumor or they failed to lyse their targets because they were selectively restricted by HLA alleles not shared by the EBV-LPD. Therefore, either unselected DLIs or EBV-specific CTLs can eradicate both untreated and Rituxan-resistant lymphomatous EBV-LPD, with failures ascribable to impaired T-cell recognition of tumor-associated viral antigens or their presenting HLA alleles.

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Nancy A. Kernan

Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center

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Esperanza B. Papadopoulos

Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center

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Hugo Castro-Malaspina

Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center

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Ann A. Jakubowski

Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center

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Sergio Giralt

Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center

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Trudy N. Small

Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center

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Farid Boulad

Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center

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Miguel-Angel Perales

Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center

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Susan E. Prockop

Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center

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Guenther Koehne

Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center

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