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Dive into the research topics where Susana R. Marino is active.

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Featured researches published by Susana R. Marino.


Blood | 2014

Impact of allele-level HLA matching on outcomes after myeloablative single unit umbilical cord blood transplantation for hematologic malignancy.

Mary Eapen; John P. Klein; Annalisa Ruggeri; Stephen Spellman; Stephanie J. Lee; Claudio Anasetti; William Arcese; Juliet N. Barker; Lee Ann Baxter-Lowe; Maria Brown; Marcelo Fernandez-Vina; John Freeman; Wensheng He; Anna Paola Iori; Mary M. Horowitz; Franco Locatelli; Susana R. Marino; Martin Maiers; Gérard Michel; Guillermo Sanz; Eliane Gluckman; Vanderson Rocha

We studied the effect of allele-level matching at human leukocyte antigen (HLA)-A, -B, -C, and -DRB1 in 1568 single umbilical cord blood (UCB) transplantations for hematologic malignancy. The primary end point was nonrelapse mortality (NRM). Only 7% of units were allele matched at HLA-A, -B, -C, and -DRB1; 15% were mismatched at 1, 26% at 2, 30% at 3, 16% at 4, and 5% at 5 alleles. In a subset, allele-level HLA match was assigned using imputation; concordance between HLA-match assignment and outcome correlation was confirmed between the actual and imputed HLA-match groups. Compared with HLA-matched units, neutrophil recovery was lower with mismatches at 3, 4, or 5, but not 1 or 2 alleles. NRM was higher with units mismatched at 1, 2, 3, 4, or 5 alleles compared with HLA-matched units. The observed effects are independent of cell dose and patient age. These data support allele-level HLA matching in the selection of single UCB units.


Blood | 2011

Reduced-intensity conditioning with combined haploidentical and cord blood transplantation results in rapid engraftment, low GVHD, and durable remissions.

Hongtao Liu; Elizabeth Rich; Lucy A. Godley; Olatoyosi Odenike; Loren Joseph; Susana R. Marino; Justin Kline; Vu H. Nguyen; John M. Cunningham; Richard A. Larson; Paula del Cerro; Linda Schroeder; Lisa Pape; Wendy Stock; Amittha Wickrema; Andrew S. Artz; Koen van Besien

We conducted a 45 patient prospective study of reduced-intensity conditioning (RIC) and transplantation of unrelated umbilical cord blood (UCB) and CD34(+) stem cells from a haploidentical family member. Median age was 50 years; weight was 80 kg. Fifty-eight percent had active disease. Neutrophil engraftment occurred at 11 days (interquartile range [IQR], 9-15) and platelet engraftment at 19 days (IQR, 15-33). In the majority of patients, early haploidentical engraftment was replaced by durable engraftment of UCB by 100 days, with regular persistence of minor host and/or haplo-hematopoiesis. Percentage of haplochimerism at day 100 correlated with the haplo-CD34 dose (P = .003). Cumulative incidence of acute GVHD (aGVHD) was 25% and chronic GVHD (cGVHD) was 5%. Actuarial survival at 1 year was 55%, progression-free survival (PFS) was 42%, nonrelapse mortality (NRM) was 28%, and relapse was 30%. RIC and haplo-cord transplantation results in fast engraftment of neutrophils and platelets, low incidences of aGVHD and cGVHD, low frequency of delayed opportunistic infections, reduced transfusion requirements, shortened length of hospital stay, and promising long-term outcomes. UCB cell dose had no impact on time to hematopoietic recovery. Therefore, UCB selection can prioritize matching, and better matched donors can be identified rapidly for most patients. This study is registered at http://clinicaltrials.gov as NCI clinical trial no. NCT00943800.


Blood | 2012

Evaluation of HLA matching in unrelated hematopoietic stem cell transplantation for nonmalignant disorders

John Horan; Tao Wang; Michael Haagenson; Stephen Spellman; Jason Dehn; Mary Eapen; Haydar Frangoul; Vikas Gupta; Gregory A. Hale; Carolyn Katovich Hurley; Susana R. Marino; Machteld Oudshoorn; Vijay Reddy; Peter J. Shaw; Stephanie J. Lee; Ann E. Woolfrey

The importance of human leukocyte antigen (HLA) matching in unrelated donor transplantation for nonmalignant diseases (NMD) has yet to be defined. We analyzed data from 663 unrelated marrow and peripheral blood stem cell transplants performed from 1995 to 2007 for treatment of NMD. Transplantation from a donor mismatched at the HLA-A, -B, -C, or -DRB1, but not -DQB1 or -DPB1, loci was associated with higher mortality in multivariate analyses (P = .002). The hazard ratio for mortality for single (7/8) and double mismatched (6/8) transplants was 1.29 (0.97-1.72; P = .079) and 1.82 (1.30-2.55; P = .0004), respectively, compared with 8/8 matched transplants. HLA mismatches were not associated with acute or chronic GVHD, but were strongly associated with graft failure. After adjustment for other factors, the odds ratio for graft failure for 7/8 and 6/8 (allele and/or antigen) matched pairs compared with 8/8 matched transplants was 2.81 (1.74-4.54; P < .0001) and 2.22 (1.26-3.97; P = .006), respectively. Patients with NMD should receive transplants from allele matched (8/8) donors if possible. Unlike the case with malignancies, HLA mismatching in NMD is associated with graft failure rather than GVHD.


Blood | 2014

Identification of a permissible HLA mismatch in hematopoietic stem cell transplantation

Marcelo Fernandez-Vina; Tao Wang; Stephanie J. Lee; Michael Haagenson; Mahmoud Aljurf; Medhat Askar; Minoo Battiwalla; Lee Ann Baxter-Lowe; James Gajewski; Ann A. Jakubowski; Susana R. Marino; Machteld Oudshoorn; Steven G.E. Marsh; Effie W. Petersdorf; Kirk R. Schultz; E. Victoria Turner; Edmund K. Waller; Ann E. Woolfrey; John Umejiego; Stephen Spellman; Michelle Setterholm

In subjects mismatched in the HLA alleles C*03:03/C*03:04 no allogeneic cytotoxic T-lymphocyte responses are detected in vitro. Hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT) with unrelated donors (UDs) showed no association between the HLA-C allele mismatches (CAMMs) and adverse outcomes; antigen mismatches at this and mismatches other HLA loci are deleterious. The absence of effect of the CAMM may have resulted from the predominance of the mismatch C*03:03/C*03:04. Patients with hematologic malignancies receiving UD HSCT matched in 8/8 and 7/8 HLA alleles were examined. Transplants mismatched in HLA-C antigens or mismatched in HLA-A, -B, or -DRB1 presented significant differences (P < .0001) in mortality (hazard ratio [HR] = 1.37, 1.30), disease-free survival (HR = 1.33, 1.27), treatment-related mortality (HR = 1.54, 1.54), and grade 3-4 acute graft-versus-host disease (HR = 1.49, 1.77) compared with the 8/8 group; transplants mismatched in other CAMMs had similar outcomes with HR ranging from 1.34 to 172 for these endpoints. The C*03:03/C*03:04 mismatched and the 8/8 matched groups had identical outcomes (HR ranging from 0.96-1.05). The previous finding that CAMMs do not associate with adverse outcomes is explained by the predominance (69%) of the mismatch C*03:03/03:04 in this group that is better tolerated than other HLA mismatches.


Blood | 2013

Amino acid substitution at peptide-binding pockets of HLA class I molecules increases risk of severe acute GVHD and mortality

Joseph Pidala; Tao Wang; Michael Haagenson; Stephen Spellman; Medhat Askar; Minoo Battiwalla; Lee Ann Baxter-Lowe; Menachem Bitan; Marcelo Fernandez-Vina; Manish J. Gandhi; Ann A. Jakubowski; Martin Maiers; Susana R. Marino; Steven G.E. Marsh; Machteld Oudshoorn; Jeanne Palmer; Vinod K. Prasad; Vijay Reddy; Olle Ringdén; Wael Saber; Stella Santarone; Kirk R. Schultz; Michelle Setterholm; Elizabeth Trachtenberg; E. Victoria Turner; Ann E. Woolfrey; Stephanie J. Lee; Claudio Anasetti

HLA disparity has a negative impact on the outcomes of hematopoietic cell transplantation (HCT). We studied the independent impact of amino acid substitution (AAS) at peptide-binding positions 9, 99, 116, and 156, and killer immunoglobulin-like receptor binding position 77 of HLA-A, B, or C, on the risks for grade 3-4 acute graft-versus-host disease (GVHD), chronic GVHD, treatment-related mortality (TRM), relapse, and overall survival. In multivariate analysis, a mismatch at HLA-C position 116 was associated with increased risk for severe acute GVHD (hazard ratio [HR] = 1.45, 95% confidence interval [CI] = 1.15-1.82, P = .0016). Mismatch at HLA-C position 99 was associated with increased transplant-related mortality (HR = 1.37, 95% CI = 1.1-1.69, P = .0038). Mismatch at HLA-B position 9 was associated with increased chronic GVHD (HR = 2.28, 95% CI = 1.36-3.82, P = .0018). No AAS were significantly associated with outcome at HLA-A. Specific AAS pair combinations with a frequency >30 were tested for association with HCT outcomes. Cysteine to tyrosine substitution at position 99 of HLA-C was associated with increased TRM (HR = 1.78, 95% = CI 1.27-2.51, P = .0009). These results demonstrate that donor-recipient mismatch for certain peptide-binding residues of the HLA class I molecule is associated with increased risk for acute and chronic GVHD and death.


Biology of Blood and Marrow Transplantation | 2011

One-Antigen Mismatched Related versus HLA-Matched Unrelated Donor Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation in Adults with Acute Leukemia: Center for International Blood and Marrow Transplant Research Results in the Era of Molecular HLA Typing

David Valcárcel; Jorge Sierra; Tao Wang; Fangyu Kan; Vikas Gupta; Gregory A. Hale; David I. Marks; Philip L. McCarthy; Machteld Oudshoorn; Effie W. Petersdorf; Olle Ringdén; Michelle Setterholm; Stephen Spellman; Edmund K. Waller; James Gajewski; Susana R. Marino; David Senitzer; Stephanie J. Lee

Approximately 13% of patients lacking an HLA-identical sibling have a one-antigen-mismatched related donor (MMRD). Historically, outcomes from the use of a one-antigen MMRD were considered equivalent to those from the use of a matched unrelated donor (UD). Recent improvements in UD stem cell transplantation (SCT) resulting from better molecular HLA matching justifies investigating whether UD should be preferred over MMRD in adult patients with acute leukemia. Here, we compared the outcomes of MMRD (n = 89) and HLA-A, -B, -C, and -DRB1 allele-matched UD (n = 700) SCT reported to the Center for International Blood and Marrow Transplant Research between 1995 and 2005. The patients underwent transplantation for acute myelogenous leukemia or acute lymphoblastic leukemia in first or second complete remission. Donor type was not associated with hematologic recovery. Univariate and multivariate comparisons of MMRD versus HLA-matched UD transplants showed no statistically significant differences in overall survival, disease-free survival, treatment-related mortality, relapse, or 100-day grade III-IV acute graft-versus-host disease (GVHD). MMRD SCT was associated with a lower rate of chronic GVHD at 1 year (35% vs 47%; P = .03), which was confirmed by multivariate analysis (relative risk, 0.58; 95% confidence interval, 0.39-0.85; P < .01). According to our data, HLA-matched UD and MMRD SCT are associated with comparable survival. Given that less chronic GVHD was observed in the MMRD transplantations, this option, when available, remains the first choice in patients with acute leukemia without an HLA-identical sibling in need of allogeneic SCT.


Clinical Journal of The American Society of Nephrology | 2011

Thrombotic Microangiopathy and Peritubular Capillary C4d Expression in Renal Allograft Biopsies

Shane Meehan; Joseph Kremer; Farah N. Ali; Jessica Curley; Susana R. Marino; Anthony Chang; Pradeep V. Kadambi

BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES This study characterizes the pathologic and clinical relationships of thrombotic microangiopathy (TMA) to antibody-mediated rejection (AMR) in renal allograft biopsies. DESIGN, SETTING, PARTICIPANTS, & MEASUREMENTS Consecutive renal allograft biopsies, routinely stained for C4d over a period of 51 months (n=1101), were reviewed. For comparative analysis of histology and clinical features, additional patients with TMA and peritubular capillary (PTC) C4d (n=5) were combined with those identified in the 51-month period of review (n=6). RESULTS One hundred eighty-two of 1073 adequate biopsies from 563 allografts had PTC C4d in the study period. Six of 37 biopsies with TMA had PTC C4d (five at ≤90 days and one at 213 days). Early (≤90 days) C4d+ biopsies (n=5) had more frequent TMA (11.9% C4d+ versus 3.4% C4d-; odds ratio, 3.84; P=0.03). Graft loss was significantly greater in an early C4d+TMA+ group (n=5 study+2 archival patients) than in C4d+ controls without TMA (n=21) (57% versus 9.5%; P=0.02). Early TMA+C4d+ biopsies had more severe glomerulopathy and less severe arteriolopathy than TMA+C4d- and had more frequent neutrophilic capillaritis than TMA-C4d+ biopsies. CONCLUSIONS TMA was infrequent in this series of unselected, consecutive, renal allograft biopsies (3.4%). PTC C4d may be a significant risk factor for early TMA, and TMA is associated with glomerular thrombi and neutrophilic capillaritis. TMA in allografts with suspected AMR may portend a higher risk of graft loss.


American Journal of Transplantation | 2009

Acute humoral rejection in an ABO compatible combined liver-kidney transplant--the kidney is not always protected.

Trevor W. Reichman; Susana R. Marino; J. Milner; Robert C. Harland; A.B. Cochrane; J. M. Millis; Giuliano Testa

Combined liver–kidney transplantation has become a common practice for the treatment of patients with concurrent end‐stage renal disease and end‐stage liver disease. Liver transplantation in the setting of multiorgan transplantation is thought to have a protective effect against humoral rejection even when a positive crossmatch is obtained prior to surgery. In most centers, a pre liver–kidney transplant crossmatch is rarely performed because of the known immunoprotective effect of the liver allograft. In this report, a case of acute humoral rejection in the kidney allograft after a combined liver–kidney transplant is described. Although humoral rejection was treated using plasmapheresis, intravenous immunoglobulin and rituximab, the kidney required 3 months to recover function and finally progressed to chronic allograft nephropathy. A heightened index of suspicion for acute humoral rejection of the renal allograft is necessary when performing combined liver–kidney transplants to highly sensitized patients due to previous organ transplants.


Bone Marrow Transplantation | 2012

Identification by random forest method of HLA class I amino acid substitutions associated with lower survival at day 100 in unrelated donor hematopoietic cell transplantation

Susana R. Marino; Shang Lin; Martin Maiers; Mike Haagenson; Stephen R. Spellman; John P. Klein; T. A. Binkowski; Stephanie J. Lee; K. Van Besien

The identification of important amino acid substitutions associated with low survival in hematopoietic cell transplantation (HCT) is hampered by the large number of observed substitutions compared with the small number of patients available for analysis. Random forest analysis is designed to address these limitations. We studied 2107 HCT recipients with good or intermediate risk hematological malignancies to identify HLA class I amino acid substitutions associated with reduced survival at day 100 post transplant. Random forest analysis and traditional univariate and multivariate analyses were used. Random forest analysis identified amino acid substitutions in 33 positions that were associated with reduced 100 day survival, including HLA-A 9, 43, 62, 63, 76, 77, 95, 97, 114, 116, 152, 156, 166 and 167; HLA-B 97, 109, 116 and 156; and HLA-C 6, 9, 11, 14, 21, 66, 77, 80, 95, 97, 99, 116, 156, 163 and 173. In all 13 had been previously reported by other investigators using classical biostatistical approaches. Using the same data set, traditional multivariate logistic regression identified only five amino acid substitutions associated with lower day 100 survival. Random forest analysis is a novel statistical methodology for analysis of HLA mismatching and outcome studies, capable of identifying important amino acid substitutions missed by other methods.


Bone Marrow Transplantation | 2014

Risk associations between HLA-DPB1 T-cell epitope matching and outcome of unrelated hematopoietic cell transplantation are independent of HLA-DPA1

Katharina Fleischhauer; Marcelo Fernandez-Vina; Tao Wang; Michael Haagenson; Minoo Battiwalla; Lee Ann Baxter-Lowe; Fabio Ciceri; Jason Dehn; James Gajewski; Gregory A. Hale; Martin B. A. Heemskerk; Susana R. Marino; Philip L. McCarthy; David B. Miklos; Machteld Oudshoorn; Marilyn S. Pollack; Vijay Reddy; David Senitzer; Bronwen E. Shaw; Edmund K. Waller; Stephanie J. Lee; Stephen Spellman

HLA-DP antigens are beta-alpha heterodimers encoded by polymorphic HLA-DPB1 and -DPA1 alleles, respectively, in strong linkage disequilibrium (LD) with each other. Non-permissive unrelated donor (UD)-recipient HLA-DPB1 mismatches across three different T-cell epitope (TCE) groups are associated with increased mortality after hematopoietic SCT (HCT), but the role of HLA-DPA1 is unclear. We studied 1281 onco-hematologic patients after 10/10 HLA-matched UD-HCT facilitated by the National Marrow Donor Program. Non-permissive mismatches defined solely by HLA-DPB1 TCE groups were associated with significantly higher risks of TRM compared to permissive mismatches (hazard ratio (HR) 1.30, confidence interval (CI) 1.06–1.53; P=0.009) or allele matches. Moreover, non-permissive HLA-DPB1 TCE group mismatches in the graft versus host (GvH) direction significantly decreased the risk of relapse compared to permissive mismatches (HR 0.55, CI 0.37–0.80; P=0.002) or allele matches. Splitting each group into HLA-DPA1*02:01 positive or negative, in frequent LD with HLA-DPB1 alleles from two of the three TCE groups, or into HLA-DPA1 matched or mismatched, did not significantly alter the observed risk associations. Our findings suggest that the effects of clinically non-permissive HLA-DPB1 TCE group mismatches are independent of HLA-DPA1, and that selection of donors with non-permissive DPB1 TCE mismatches in GvH direction might provide some protection from disease recurrence.

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Stephanie J. Lee

Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center

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Machteld Oudshoorn

Leiden University Medical Center

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