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Dive into the research topics where Vladan Vucinic is active.

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Featured researches published by Vladan Vucinic.


Blood | 2013

High-resolution HLA matching in hematopoietic stem cell transplantation: a retrospective collaborative analysis

D. Fürst; Carlheinz Müller; Vladan Vucinic; Donald Bunjes; Wolfgang Herr; Martin Gramatzki; Rainer Schwerdtfeger; Renate Arnold; Hermann Einsele; Gerald Wulf; Michael Pfreundschuh; Bertram Glass; Hubert Schrezenmeier; Klaus Schwarz; Joannis Mytilineos

To validate current donor selection strategies based on previous international studies, we retrospectively analyzed 2646 transplantations performed for hematologic malignancies in 28 German transplant centers. Donors and recipients were high resolution typed for HLA-A, -B, -C, -DRB1, and -DQB1. The highest mortality in overall survival analysis was seen for HLA-A, -B, and DRB1 mismatches. HLA-DQB1 mismatched cases showed a trend toward higher mortality, mostly due to HLA-DQB1 antigen disparities. HLA incompatibilities at >1 locus showed additive detrimental effects. HLA mismatching had no significant effect on relapse incidence and primary graft failure. Graft source had no impact on survival end points, neither in univariate nor in multivariate analysis. Higher patient age, advanced disease, transplantations before 2004, patient C2C2 killer cell immunoglobulin-like receptor (KIR)-ligand phenotype, and unavailability of a national donor adversely influenced outcomes in multivariate analysis. Our study confirms the association of HLA-A, -B, -C, and -DRB1 incompatibilities with adverse outcome in hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT). The relevance of HLA-DQB1 disparities in single mismatched transplantations remains unclear. Similar hazard ratios for allele and antigen mismatches (possibly with an exception for HLA-DQB1) highlight the importance of allele level typing and matching in HSCT. The number of incompatibilities and their type significantly impact survival.


Blood | 2010

Radioimmunotherapy with yttrium-90-ibritumomab tiuxetan as part of a reduced- intensity conditioning regimen for allogeneic hematopoietic cell transplantation in patients with advanced non-Hodgkin lymphoma: results of a phase 2 study

Wolfgang Bethge; Thoralf Lange; Christoph Meisner; Stephanie von Harsdorf; Martin Bornhaeuser; Birgit Federmann; Michael Stadler; Lutz Uharek; Matthias Stelljes; Stefan Knop; Gerald Wulf; Rudolf Trenschel; Vladan Vucinic; Helmut Dittmann; Christoph Faul; Wichard Vogel; Lothar Kanz; Donald Bunjes

Forty patients were enrolled in this phase 2 study combining radioimmunotherapy (RIT) using yttrium-90-ibritumomab-tiuxetan (15 MBq [0.4 mCi]/kg) with reduced-intensity conditioning (RIC) using fludarabine (90 mg/m(2)) and 2 Gy total body irradiation followed by allogeneic hematopoietic cell transplantation (HCT) from related (n = 13) or unrelated (n = 27) donors for the treatment of advanced non-Hodgkin lymphoma. Diagnoses were follicular lymphoma (n = 17), chronic lymphocytic leukemia (n = 13), mantle cell lymphoma (n = 8), marginal zone lymphoma (n = 1), and lymphoplasmacytic lymphoma (n = 1). Median age was 55 years (range, 34-68 years). All patients were high risk with refractory disease or relapse after preceding autologous HCT. No additional toxicities attributable to RIT were observed. Engraftment was rapid and sustained. Incidences of acute graft-versus-host disease 2-4 and chronic graft-versus-host disease were 43% and 53%, respectively. Kaplan-Meier-estimated nonrelapse mortality was 45% at 2 years. Twenty-two of 40 patients (55%) are alive, resulting in a Kaplan-Meier-estimated 2-year survival of 51% for all, 67% for follicular lymphoma, 49% for chronic lymphocytic leukemia, and 37% for mantle cell lymphoma patients. The combined use of RIT with RIC is feasible with acceptable toxicity, even in elderly and heavily pretreated patients. This study is registered at www.clinicaltrials.gov as #NCT00302757.


Biology of Blood and Marrow Transplantation | 2013

Fludarabine and 2-Gy TBI is Superior to 2 Gy TBI as Conditioning for HLA-Matched Related Hematopoietic Cell Transplantation: A Phase III Randomized Trial

Brian Kornblit; David G. Maloney; Rainer Storb; Jan Storek; Parameswaran Hari; Vladan Vucinic; Richard T. Maziarz; Thomas R. Chauncey; Michael A. Pulsipher; Benedetto Bruno; Finn Bo Petersen; Wolfgang Bethge; Kai Hübel; Michelle E. Bouvier; Barry E. Storer

The risks and benefits of adding fludarabine to a 2-Gy total body irradiation (TBI) nonmyeloablative regimen are unknown. For this reason, we conducted a prospective randomized trial comparing 2-Gy TBI alone, or in combination with 90 mg/m(2) fludarabine (FLU/TBI), before transplantation of peripheral blood stem cells from HLA-matched related donors. Eighty-five patients with hematological malignancies were randomized to be conditioned with TBI alone (n = 44) or FLU/TBI (n = 41). All patients had initial engraftment. Two graft rejections were observed, both in the TBI group. Infection rates, nonrelapse mortality, and graft-versus-host disease (GVHD) were similar between groups. Three-year overall survival was lower in the TBI group (54% versus 65%; hazard ratio [HR], .57; P = .09), with higher incidences of relapse/progression (55% versus 40%; HR, .55; P = .06), relapse-related mortality (37% versus 28%; HR, .53; P = .09), and a lower progression-free survival (36% versus 53%; HR, .56; P = .05). Median donor T cell chimerism levels were significantly lower in the TBI group at days 28 (61% versus 90%; P < .0001) and 84 (68% versus 92%; P < .0001), as was NK cell chimerism on day 28 (75% versus 96%; P = .0005). In conclusion, this randomized trial demonstrates the importance of fludarabine in augmenting the graft-versus-tumor effect by ensuring prompt and durable high-level donor engraftment early after transplantation.


Leukemia & Lymphoma | 2012

Bcr–Abl dependent post-transcriptional activation of NME2 expression is a specific and common feature of chronic myeloid leukemia

Sabine Tschiedel; Enrica Bach; Annette Jilo; Song-Yau Wang; Thoralf Lange; Haifa-Kathrin Al-Ali; Vladan Vucinic; Dietger Niederwieser; Michael Cross

Abstract We have previously identified NME2 (Nm23-H2) as a tumor antigen in a patient with chronic myeloid leukemia (CML). Here we investigated the association between NME2 and Bcr–Abl. NME2 protein was highly overexpressed in the cytoplasm of peripheral blood mononuclear cells from 29/30 patients with CML at diagnosis and 10/10 patients resistant to imatinib. Protein was overexpressed in the absence of increased levels of mRNA and was limited to Bcr–Abl + populations, being absent from Bcr–Abl − patient cells, normal donors and 14/15 acute myeloid leukemia (AML) samples. Furthermore, the Bcr–Abl dependent overexpression of NME2 protein was reversed specifically by tyrosine kinase inhibitor (TKI) treatment of Ba/F3 expressing wild-type and TKI-sensitive, but not TKI-resistant, mutants of Bcr–Abl. The post-transcriptional up-regulation of the tumor antigen NME2 is therefore a common and specific property of CML closely associated with Bcr–Abl activity.


Oncotarget | 2017

A meta-analysis of HLA peptidome composition in different hematological entities: entity-specific dividing lines and "pan-leukemia" antigens

Linus Backert; Daniel J. Kowalewski; Simon Walz; Heiko Schuster; Claudia Berlin; Marian Christoph Neidert; Mirle Schemionek; Tim H. Brümmendorf; Vladan Vucinic; Dietger Niederwieser; Lothar Kanz; Helmut R. Salih; Oliver Kohlbacher; Katja Weisel; Hans-Georg Rammensee; Stefan Stevanovic; Juliane Sarah Walz

Hematological malignancies (HM) are highly amenable targets for immunotherapeutic intervention and may be effectively treated by antigen-specific T-cell based treatment. Recent studies demonstrate that physiologically occurring anti-cancer T-cell responses in certain HM entities target broadly presented non-mutated epitopes. HLA ligands are thus implied as prime targets for broadly applicable and antigen-specific off-the-shelf compounds. With the aim of assessing the presence of common targets shared among different HM which may enable addressing a larger patient collective we conducted a meta-analysis of 83 mass spectrometry-based HLA peptidome datasets (comprising 40,361 unique peptide identifications) across four major HM (19 AML, 16 CML, 35 CLL, and 13 MM/MCL samples) and investigated similarities and differences within the HLA presented antigenic landscape. We found the cancer HLA peptidome datasets to cluster specifically along entity and lineage lines, suggesting that the immunopeptidome directly reflects the differences in the underlying (tumor-)biology. In line with these findings, we only detected a small set of entity-spanning antigens, which were predominantly characterized by low presentation frequencies within the different patient cohorts. These findings suggest that design of T-cell immunotherapies for the treatment of HM should ideally be conducted in an entity-specific fashion.


Leukemia & Lymphoma | 2014

Low tumor burden is associated with early B-cell reconstitution and is a predictor of favorable outcome after non-myeloablative stem cell transplant for chronic lymphocytic leukemia

Karin Hebenstreit; Simona Iacobelli; Sabine Leiblein; Ann-Kathrin Eisfeld; Christian Pfrepper; Simone Heyn; Vladan Vucinic; Georg-Nikolaus Franke; Rainer Krahl; Stephan Fricke; Cornelia Becker; Wolfram Pönisch; Gerhard Behre; Dietger Niederwieser; Thoralf Lange

Abstract Reconstitution, engraftment kinetics and tumor cell clearance were analyzed after reduced intensity conditioning hematopoietic cell transplant (RIC-HCT) in patients with chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL). Patients were transplanted from unrelated (n = 40) or related (n = 10) donors after fludarabine and 2 Gy total body irradiation followed by cyclosporine and mycophenolate mofetil. The vast majority of patients (96%) engrafted with absolute neutrophil count (ANC) > 0.5 × 109/L at day + 22. CLL cells decreased (median 2%, range 0–69%) within 28 days, but disappeared by day + 180 after HCT. Donor T-cell chimerism increased to > 95% at day 56 and donor B-cell chimerism to 94% at day + 360. Overall survival was 51 ± 8%, incidence of progression 37 ± 7% and non-relapse related mortality (NRM) 30 ± 7% at 4 years. The most common causes of NRM were graft-versus-host disease (GvHD) (14%) and sepsis (6%). Disease status at HCT was significantly associated with early B-cell reconstitution (p = 0.04) and with increased risk of relapse/progression in univariate and multivariate analysis (p = 0.022). Tumor cells were undetectable by day + 180, although B-cell reconstitution did not occur until 1.5 years after RIC-HCT. The best predictors for progression-free survival (PFS) and overall survival (OS) were complete response (CR) or first partial response (PR1) and the absence of bulky disease at transplant, respectively.


Leukemia | 2018

Questions arising on phlebotomy in polycythemia vera: prophylactic measures to reduce thromboembolic events require patient-focused decisions

Florian H. Heidel; Haifa-Kathrin Al-Ali; Carsten Hirt; Dietrich Kämpfe; Kathleen Jentsch-Ullrich; Christian Junghanss; Ralf Nowak; Andreas Schwarzer; Claudia Spohn; Vladan Vucinic; Andreas Hochhaus; Thoralf Lange

More than 1500 years ago, Scribonius Largus published the maxime ‘primum non nocere, secundum cavere, tertium sanare’ to focus his Roman colleagues on the central aspect of therapeutic measures: the patient’s health and well-being. It implicates that therapeutic measures (and their side effects) need to be balanced in regard to expected benefits and outcome. Treatment of myeloproliferative neoplasia has been focused on cytoreduction for a long time, as pathophysiological aspects (e.g., identification of the underlying driver mutation) had not been clarified and targeted therapies had not been developed or approved. Following discovery of molecular targets within the last decade and the emergence of Janus-kinase (JAK) inhibitors, which can ameliorate and even abrogate constitutional and inflammatory symptoms [1], quality of life has come into focus as a therapeutic goal [2]. Physical activity, productivity and well-being of patients suffering from polycythemia vera (PV) are severely hampered by the disease and improvement of quality of life as well as reduction of symptom burden have become a major therapeutic goal for both PV patients and their physicians [3–5]. Therefore, therapeutic goals for patients diagnosed with PV clearly need to be redefined. Among a variety of measures, physicians as well as patients have clarified clinical needs that should be taken into consideration:


Annals of Hematology | 2018

Digital droplet PCR-based absolute quantification of pre-transplant NPM1 mutation burden predicts relapse in acute myeloid leukemia patients

Marius Bill; Juliane Grimm; Madlen Jentzsch; Laura Kloss; Karoline Goldmann; Julia Schulz; Stefanie Beinicke; Janine Häntschel; Michael Cross; Vladan Vucinic; Wolfram Pönisch; Gerhard Behre; Georg-Nikolaus Franke; Thoralf Lange; Dietger Niederwieser; Sebastian Schwind

Allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation is an established consolidation therapy for patients with acute myeloid leukemia. However, relapse after transplantation remains a major clinical problem resulting in poor prognosis. Thus, detection of measurable (“minimal”) residual disease to identify patients at high risk of relapse is essential. A feasible method to determine measurable residual disease may be digital droplet PCR (ddPCR) that allows absolute quantification with high sensitivity and specificity without the necessity of standard curves. Using ddPCR, we analyzed pre-transplant peripheral blood and bone marrow of 51 NPM1-mutated acute myeloid leukemia patients transplanted in complete remission or complete remission with incomplete recovery. Mutated NPM1 measurable residual disease-positive patients had higher cumulative incidence of relapse (P < 0.001) and shorter overall survival (P = 0.014). Restricting the analyses to patients receiving non-myeloablative conditioning, mutated NPM1 measurable residual disease positivity is associated with higher cumulative incidence of relapse (P < 0.001) and shorter overall survival (P = 0.006). Positive mutated NPM1 measurable residual disease status determined by ddPCR before allogeneic stem cell transplantation is associated with worse prognosis independent of other known prognostic markers—also for those receiving non-myeloablative conditioning. In the future, mutated NPM1 measurable residual disease status determined by ddPCR might guide treatment and improve patients’ outcomes.


Haematologica | 2017

Human leukocyte antigen-E mismatch is associated with better hematopoietic stem cell transplantation outcome in acute leukemia patients

Chrysanthi Tsamadou; D. Fürst; Vladan Vucinic; Donald Bunjes; Christine Neuchel; Daphne Mytilineos; Martin Gramatzki; Renate Arnold; Eva Wagner; Hermann Einsele; Carlheinz Müller; Hubert Schrezenmeier; Joannis Mytilineos

The immunomodulatory role of human leukocyte antigen (HLA)-E in hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT) has not been extensively investigated. To this end, we genotyped 509 10/10 HLA unrelated transplant pairs for HLA-E, in order to study the effect of HLA-E as a natural killer (NK)-alloreactivity mediator on HSCT outcome in an acute leukemia (AL) setting. Overall survival (OS), disease free survival (DFS), relapse incidence (RI) and non-relapse mortality (NRM) were set as endpoints. Analysis of our data revealed a significant correlation between HLA-E mismatch and improved HSCT outcome, as shown by both univariate (53% vs. 38%, P=0.002, 5-year OS) and multivariate (hazard ratio (HR)=0.63, confidence interval (CI) 95%=0.48–0.83, P=0.001) analyses. Further subgroup analysis demonstrated that the positive effect of HLA-E mismatch was significant and pronounced in advanced disease patients (n=120) (5-year OS: 50% vs. 18%, P=0.005; HR=0.40, CI 95%=0.22–0.72, P=0.002; results from univariate and multivariate analyses, respectively). The study herein is the first to report an association between HLA-E incompatibility and improved post–transplant prognosis in AL patients who have undergone matched unrelated HSCT. Combined NK and T cell HLA-E-mediated mechanisms may account for the better outcomes observed. Notwithstanding the necessity for in vitro and confirmational studies, our findings highlight the clinical relevance of HLA-E matching and strongly support prospective HLA-E screening upon donor selection for matched AL unrelated HSCTs.


Biology of Blood and Marrow Transplantation | 2017

Inversion 3 Cytogenetic Abnormality in an Allogeneic Hematopoietic Cell Transplant Recipient Representative of a Donor-Derived Constitutional Abnormality

Ajoy Dias; Aref Al-Kali; Daniel L. Van Dyke; Dietger Niederwieser; Vladan Vucinic; Johannes Lemke; Christel Müller; Sebastian Schwind; Anne Christin Teichmann; Ruth Bakken; Linda J. Burns; Mark R. Litzow

Allogeneic hematopoietic cell transplantation (HCT) is an important treatment for many severe hematologic disorders; however, HCT can be associated with significant complications, including organ toxicity, graft-versus-host disease, and relapse. Another serious, but rare, complication is the transmission of hematologic and nonhematologic diseases from the donor to the recipient. With older donors, the risk of an abnormality may be increased. Here we describe the transmission of an inversion 3 constitutional cytogenetic abnormality from an unrelated donor to a recipient, and review the clinical implications of the discovery of donor-derived constitutional cytogenetic abnormalities.

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