W. H. Burns
Johns Hopkins University
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Featured researches published by W. H. Burns.
Journal of Clinical Oncology | 1990
Richard J. Jones; S Piantadosi; Risa B. Mann; Richard F. Ambinder; Eric J. Seifter; Huibert M. Vriesendorp; Martin D. Abeloff; W. H. Burns; W S May; Scott D. Rowley
Patients with Hodgkins disease who have failed two or more chemotherapy regimens or who have relapsed after an initial chemotherapy-induced remission of less than 12 months are seldom cured with conventional salvage therapies. We studied the effect of high-dose cytoreductive therapy followed by bone marrow transplantation in 50 such patients with relapsed Hodgkins disease. Twenty-one patients with histocompatibility locus antigen (HLA)-matched donors had allogeneic marrow transplants, one patient received marrow from an identical twin, and 28 patients without a matched donor received autologous grafts purged with 4-hydroperoxycyclophosphamide. Busulfan plus cyclophosphamide was the preparative regimen for the 25 patients who had received extensive prior irradiation, and the other 25 patients received cyclophosphamide plus total body irradiation. The overall actuarial probability of event-free survival at 3 years was 30%, with a median follow-up of 26 months. The event-free survival following transplantation was influenced by the number of chemotherapy failures and the patients response to conventional salvage therapy prior to transplant. The 16 patients who were transplanted at first relapse, while still responsive to standard therapy, had a 64% actuarial probability of event-free survival at 3 years. Age, presence of extranodal disease, preparative regimen, and type of graft (autologous v allogeneic) were not significant prognostic factors. The majority of transplant-related deaths were from interstitial pneumonitis; inadequate pulmonary function, multiple prior chemotherapy regimens, and prior chest irradiation all appeared to increase the transplant-related mortality. These results suggest a role for marrow transplantation in a subset of patients with relapsed Hodgkins disease who are unlikely to be otherwise cured but are still responsive to conventional-dose cytoreductive therapy.
Journal of Clinical Oncology | 1990
John R. Wingard; S Piantadosi; G. W. Santos; Rein Saral; Huibert M. Vriesendorp; Andrew M. Yeager; W. H. Burns; Richard F. Ambinder; Hayden G. Braine; Gerald J. Elfenbein
Seventy-four consecutive patients with high-risk acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) were given cyclophosphamide (CY; 50 mg/kg on each of 4 days) plus total body irradiation (TBI; 300 rad on each of 4 days) followed by a human leukocyte antigen (HLA)-identical allogeneic bone marrow transplant (BMT). Eighteen patients in first complete remission (CR1), 36 in CR2, 16 in CR3, and four in CR4 were transplanted. Patients in CR1 were transplanted 1 to 8 months (median, 3 months) after attaining CR. All 18 patients in CR1 had one or more poor risk factors: age more than 18 (N = 17), initial leukocyte count greater than or equal to 20,000 (N = 11), Ph 1 chromosome (N = 2), delay in attaining CR more than 6 weeks (N = 8), or extramedullary disease (N = 1). Of those transplanted in CR2, 72% had relapsed on therapy. The 5-year event-free survival (EFS) rates for patients transplanted in CR1, CR2, and CR3 are 42%, 43%, and 25%, respectively, at median follow-up times of 57, 54, and 72 months, respectively. Children aged less than 18 years transplanted in CR2 have a 5-year EFS rate of 54%. All CR4 patients died early after transplant. The actuarial probability of relapse is 20%, 26%, and 48% for those transplanted in CR1, CR2, and CR3, respectively. Although there was substantial transplant-associated mortality, it decreased over the decade of the study (P = .01). This study indicates that BMT offers an attractive alternative to postremission chemotherapy in patients in CR1 with poor prognostic factors and in patients in second remission.
Transplantation | 1988
John R. Wingard; M. B. Sostrin; Huibert M. Vriesendorp; E. D. Mellits; G. W. Santos; Dj Fuller; Hayden G. Braine; Andrew M. Yeager; W. H. Burns; Rein Saral
Interstitial pneumonitis (IP) occurred in 20 of 143 14%) patients who received cytoreductive therapy followed by autologous bone marrow transplantation BMT) as treatment for malignancy. IP occurred at a median onset time of 41 days (5 to 624 days). All but three of the episodes were fatal. Of the thirteen cases in which tissue was examined, half were idiopathic; the remainder were due to various infectious agents. The lectuarial incidences of idiopathic (7%) and CMV IP (2%) these marrow autograft recipients were lower than he incidences of idiopathic (19%) and CMV IP (17%) in comparably treated recipients of allogeneic BMT p≤0.001 for both comparisons).
The Lancet | 1982
TimothyR. Townsend; Robert H. Yolken; CatherineA. Bishop; G. W. Santos; ElizabethA. Bolyard; WilliamE. Beschorner; W. H. Burns; Rein Saral
In a three-week period 7 of 14 transplant recipients were infected with coxsackie A1 virus. Diarrhoea and mortality were significantly associated with infection (7 of 7 infected compared with 0 of 7 non-infected, and 6 of 7 infected compared with 1 of 7 non-infected, respectively). Early in the outbreak, the diarrhoea was presumed to be due to acute graft-versus-host disease (AGVHD). However, the distribution of AGVHD among infected and non-infected patients was nearly equal, and at necropsy 3 of 6 infected patients who had had diarrhoea showed no evidence of gastrointestinal involvement with AGVHD. Infection with viral enteric pathogens may be an important factor in the clinical course of transplant recipients.
Journal of Clinical Oncology | 1988
Robert B. Geller; G. B. Vogelsang; John R. Wingard; Andrew M. Yeager; W. H. Burns; G. W. Santos; Rein Saral
Five patients with acute myelocytic leukemia (AML) after combined modality therapy for Hodgkins disease (HD) were treated with cyclophosphamide and busulfan followed by bone marrow transplantation (BMT). Four patients received allogeneic transplants from histocompatibility locus antigen (HLA)-compatible siblings and the fifth patient received an autologous marrow treated with 4-hydroperoxycyclophosphamide. Two patients died of complications of acute graft-v-host disease (GVHD) despite prophylaxis with either low-dose cyclophosphamide or cyclosporine. The remaining three patients were alive and disease-free 382, 617, and 620 days after transplant. These initial results are encouraging and more patients with treatment-related AML need to be evaluated with both allogeneic and autologous BMT to fully elucidate the potentially curative role of this intensive therapy in an otherwise fatal hematologic malignancy.
Acta Haematologica | 1987
George W. Santos; Rein Saral; W. H. Burns; Hayden G. Braine; Lyle L. Sensenbrenner; John R. Wingard; Andrew M. Yeager; Richard H. Jones; Richard F. Ambinder; Scott D. Rowley; S. May; G. B. Vogelsang
Allogeneic bone marrow transplants (BMT) in acute lymphoblastic leukemia following cyclophosphamide (Cy) and total body irradiation (TBI) has resulted in disease-free survival (DFS) for CR1, CR2, and CR3 of 10/18 (56%), 16/30 (53%) and 4/17 (24%), respectively. Median follow-up of survivors was 25-43 months. One relapse was seen in CR1, 1 in CR2, and 6 in CR3. Allogeneic BMT in acute nonlymphoblastic leukemia (ANLL) following busulfan (Bu) resulted in DFS for CR1, CR2 + CR3 + early relapse of 21/47 (45%) and 13/41 (32%), respectively. Median DFS of survivors of all groups together was 36 months. DFS of all patients 20 years or less was 15/27 (56%) and 19/61 (31%) for ages 21-46. Three relapses of 47 (6%) were seen in CR1 and 6/41 (15%) in subsequent remission and early relapse. BMT of autologous BMT with 4-hydroperoxy-cyclophosphamide (4-HC) purged marrow in ANLL in CR1 (5), CR2 (32) and CR3 (9) following Bu + Cy resulted in DFS of 19/46 (41%) for 1-67 months (median 15 months). Twenty patients with prior risk non-Hodgkins lymphoma received 4-HC-purged marrow following Cy + TBI. DFS was 10/20 (50%) for 1.4-9.5 years (median 2.9 years).
Archive | 1985
Hayden G. Braine; H. Kaizer; Andrew M. Yeager; Robert K. Stuart; W. H. Burns; Rein Saral; Lyle L. Sensenbrenner; G. W. Santos
The observation that syngeneic marrow transplantation following supralethal cytoreductive therapy can produce relatively long-term disease-free survival in a significant fraction of patients with acute leukemia [1] and non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma [2, 3] suggests that cure of these diseases may be achieved with marrow transplantation without the hazards of graft-versus-host disease that accompany allogeneic marrow transplants.
Blood | 1985
Herbert Kaizer; Robert K. Stuart; Ron Brookmeyer; William E. Beschorner; Hayden G. Braine; W. H. Burns; D. J. Fuller; M. Korbling; K. F. Mangan; Rein Saral
Blood | 1989
Lm Schuchter; John R. Wingard; S Piantadosi; W. H. Burns; G. W. Santos; Rein Saral
Bone Marrow Transplantation | 1989
John R. Wingard; E. D. Mellits; Richard J. Jones; William E. Beschorner; M. B. Sostrin; W. H. Burns; G. W. Santos; Rein Saral