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Featured researches published by Yahia Jabali.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2014

Intensive Chemotherapy for Childhood Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia: Results of the Randomized Intercontinental Trial ALL IC-BFM 2002

Jan Stary; Martin Zimmermann; Myriam Campbell; Luis Castillo; Eduardo Dibar; Svetlana Donska; Alejandro Gonzalez; Shai Izraeli; Dragana Janic; Janez Jazbec; Josip Konja; Emilia Kaiserova; Jerzy Kowalczyk; Gabor G. Kovacs; Chi Kong Li; Edina Magyarosy; Alexander Popa; Batia Stark; Yahia Jabali; Jan Trka; Ondrej Hrusak; H. Riehm; Giuseppe Masera; Martin Schrappe

PURPOSE From 2002 to 2007, the International Berlin-Frankfurt-Münster Study Group conducted a prospective randomized clinical trial (ALL IC-BFM 2002) for the management of childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) in 15 countries on three continents. The aim of this trial was to explore the impact of differential delayed intensification (DI) on outcome in all risk groups. PATIENTS AND METHODS For this trial, 5,060 eligible patients were divided into three risk groups according to age, WBC, early treatment response, and unfavorable genetic aberrations. DI was randomized as follows: standard risk (SR), two 4-week intensive elements (protocol III) versus one 7-week protocol II; intermediate risk (IR), protocol III × 3 versus protocol II × 1; high risk (HR), protocol III × 3 versus either protocol II × 2 (Associazione Italiana Ematologia Oncologia Pediatrica [AIEOP] option), or 3 HR blocks plus single protocol II (Berlin-Frankfurt-Münster [BFM] option). RESULTS At 5 years, the probabilities of event-free survival and survival were 74% (± 1%) and 82% (± 1%) for all 5,060 eligible patients, 81% and 90% for the SR (n = 1,564), 75% and 83% for the IR (n = 2,650), and 55% and 62% for the HR (n = 846) groups, respectively. No improvement was accomplished by more intense and/or prolonged DI. CONCLUSION The ALL IC-BFM 2002 trial is a good example of international collaboration in pediatric oncology. A wide platform of countries able to run randomized studies in ALL has been established. Although the alternative DI did not improve outcome compared with standard treatment and the overall results are worse than those achieved by longer established leukemia groups, the national results have generally improved.


Human Mutation | 2009

Identification of mutations in the ribosomal protein L5 (RPL5) and ribosomal protein L11 (RPL11) genes in Czech patients with Diamond-Blackfan anemia.

Radek Cmejla; Jana Cmejlova; Helena Handrkova; Jiri Petrak; Kvetoslava Petrtylova; Vladimír Mihál; Jan Stary; Zdena Cerna; Yahia Jabali; Dagmar Pospisilova

Diamond‐Blackfan anemia (DBA) is a congenital red blood cell aplasia that is usually diagnosed during early infancy. Apart from defects in red blood cell maturation, the disorder is also associated with various physical anomalies in 40% of patients. Mutations in the ribosomal protein (RP) S19 are found in 25% of patients, while mutations in other proteins of the small ribosomal subunit—RPS17 and RPS24—have been found in a fraction of patients. Recently, mutations in RPL5, RPL11, and RPL35a of the large ribosomal subunit have also been reported in several DBA patients. Here, we present the identification of mutations in the RPL5 and RPL11 genes in patients from the Czech DBA Registry. Mutations in RPL5 were identified in eight patients from 6 out of 28 families (21.4%), and mutations in RPL11 in two patients from 2 out of 28 families (7.1%). Interestingly, all 10 patients with either an RPL5 or RPL11 mutation exhibited one or more physical anomalies; specifically, thumb anomalies (flat thenar) were always present, while no such anomaly was observed in seven patients with an RPS19 mutation. Moreover, 9 out of 10 patients with either an RPL5 or RPL11 mutation were born small for gestational age (SGA) compared to 3 out of 7 patients from the RPS19‐mutated group. These observations may suggest that mutations, at least in RPL5, seem to generally have more profound impact on fetal development than mutations in RPS19. Since RPL5 and RPL11, together with RPL23, are also involved in the MDM2‐mediated p53 pathway regulation, we also screened the RPL23 gene for mutations; however, no mutations were identified. Hum Mutat 0, 1–7, 2009.


Haematologica | 2010

Prognosis of children with mixed phenotype acute leukemia treated on the basis of consistent immunophenotypic criteria

Ester Mejstrikova; Jana Volejnikova; Eva Fronkova; Katerina Zdrahalova; Tomáš Kalina; Jaroslav Sterba; Yahia Jabali; Vladimír Mihál; Bohumir Blazek; Zdena Cerna; Daniela Prochazkova; Jiri Hak; Zuzana Zemanova; Marie Jarosova; Alexandra Oltová; Petr Sedlacek; Jiri Schwarz; Jan Zuna; Jan Trka; Jan Stary; Ondrej Hrusak

Background Mixed phenotype acute leukemia (MPAL) represents a diagnostic and therapeutic dilemma. The European Group for the Immunological Classification of Leukemias (EGIL) scoring system unambiguously defines MPAL expressing aberrant lineage markers. Discussions surrounding it have focused on scoring details, and information is limited regarding its biological, clinical and prognostic significance. The recent World Health Organization classification is simpler and could replace the EGIL scoring system after transformation into unambiguous guidelines. Design and Methods Simple immunophenotypic criteria were used to classify all cases of childhood acute leukemia in order to provide therapy directed against acute lymphoblastic leukemia or acute myeloid leukemia. Prognosis, genotype and immunoglobulin/T-cell receptor gene rearrangement status were analyzed. Results The incidences of MPAL were 28/582 and 4/107 for children treated with acute lymphoblastic leukemia and acute myeloid leukemia regimens, respectively. In immunophenotypic principal component analysis, MPAL treated as T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia clustered between cases of non-mixed T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia and acute myeloid leukemia, while other MPAL cases were included in the respective non-mixed B-cell progenitor acute lymphoblastic leukemia or acute myeloid leukemia clusters. Analogously, immunoglobulin/T-cell receptor gene rearrangements followed the expected pattern in patients treated as having acute myeloid leukemia (non-rearranged, 4/4) or as having B-cell progenitor acute lymphoblastic leukemia (rearranged, 20/20), but were missing in 3/5 analyzed cases of MPAL treated as having T-cell acute lymphobastic leukemia. In patients who received acute lymphoblastic leukemia treatment, the 5-year event-free survival of the MPAL cases was worse than that of the non-mixed cases (53±10% and 76±2% at 5 years, respectively, P=0.0075), with a more pronounced difference among B lineage cases. The small numbers of MPAL cases treated as T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia or as acute myeloid leukemia hampered separate statistics. We compared prognosis of all subsets with the prognosis of previously published cohorts. Conclusions Simple immunophenotypic criteria are useful for therapy decisions in MPAL. In B lineage leukemia, MPAL confers poorer prognosis. However, our data do not justify a preferential use of current acute myeloid leukemia-based therapy in MPAL.


Leukemia | 2010

Long-term results of treatment of childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia in the Czech Republic

Jan Stary; Yahia Jabali; J Trka; Ondřej Hrušák; P. Gajdoš; Hana Hrstková; J Sterba; B Blazek; J. Hak; Dagmar Procházková; Z. Černá; Petr Smisek; Petr Sedlacek; V. Vávra; Vladimír Mihál; O. Hrodek

Long-term results of treatment of childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia in the Czech Republic


Haematologica | 2011

Minimal residual disease in peripheral blood at day 15 identifies a subgroup of childhood B-cell precursor acute lymphoblastic leukemia with superior prognosis

Jana Volejnikova; Ester Mejstrikova; Tatana Valova; Leona Reznickova; Ladislava Hodonska; Vladimír Mihál; Jaroslav Sterba; Yahia Jabali; Daniela Prochazkova; Bohumir Blazek; Jiri Hak; Z. Černá; Ondrej Hrusak; Jan Stary; Jan Trka; Eva Fronkova

Background Most minimal residual disease-directed treatment interventions in current treatment protocols for acute lymphoblastic leukemia are based on bone marrow testing, which is a consequence of previous studies showing the superiority of bone marrow over peripheral blood as an investigational material. Those studies typically did not explore the prognostic impact of peripheral blood involvement and lacked samples from very early time points of induction. Design and Methods In this study, we employed real-time quantitative polymerase chain reaction analysis to examine minimal residual disease in 398 pairs of blood and bone marrow follow-up samples taken from 95 children with B-cell precursor acute lymphoblastic leukemia treated with the ALL IC-BFM 2002 protocol. Results We confirmed the previously published poor correlation between minimal residual disease in blood and marrow at early treatment time points, with levels in bone marrow being higher than in blood in most samples (median 7.9-fold, range 0.04–8,293-fold). A greater involvement of peripheral blood at diagnosis was associated with a higher white blood cell count at diagnosis (P=0.003) and with enlargement of the spleen (P=0.0004) and liver (P=0.05). At day 15, a level of minimal residual disease in blood lower than 10−4 was associated with an excellent 5-year relapse-free survival in 78 investigated patients (100% versus 69±7%; P=0.0003). Subgroups defined by the level of minimal residual disease in blood at day 15 (high-risk: ≥10−2, intermediate-risk: <10−2 and ≥10−4, standard-risk: <10−4) partially correlated with bone marrow-based stratification described previously, but the risk groups did not match completely. No other time point analyses were predictive of outcome in peripheral blood, except for a weak association at day 8. Conclusions Minimal residual disease in peripheral blood at day 15 identified a large group of patients with an excellent prognosis and added prognostic information to the risk stratification based on minimal residual disease at day 33 and week 12.


Medical and Pediatric Oncology | 2000

Acute lymphoblastic leukemia in infants: A decade of experience in the Czech Republic

Yahia Jabali; Jan Starý; Jiří Hak; Bohumil Blažek; Hana Hrstková; Vladimír Mihál; Josef Mydlil; Petr Timr; P. Gajdoš

Acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) in infants is a rare disease. Particularly babies under 6 months of age and those with a t(4,11) have a poor prognosis early treatment failure being the rule. Here we report on the outcome of 28 infants with ALL treated in 1986-1995 by members of the Czech Pediatric Hematology Working Group.


Blood | 2011

Results of the Randomized I-BFM-SG Trial „Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia Intercontinental-BFM 2002“ in 5060 Children Diagnosed in 15 Countries on 3 Continents

Jan Stary; Martin Zimmermann; Myriam Campbell; Luis Castillo; Eduardo Dibar; Svetlana Donska; Alejandro Gonzalez; Shai Izraeli; Dragana Janic; Janez Jazbec; Josip Konja; Emilia Kaiserova; Jerzy Kowalczyk; Gabor G. Kovacs; Chi Kong Li; Edina Magyarosy; Alexander Popa; Batia Stark; Yahia Jabali; Jan Trka; Ondrej Hrusak; Iveta Janotova; Hansjörg Riehm; Giuseppe Masera; Martin Schrappe


Medical and Pediatric Oncology | 2002

Treatment of Czech children with acute lymphoblastic leukemia: A report of the Czech working group for pediatric hematology

Jan Starý; P. Gajdoš; Hana Hrstková; Bohumír Blažek; Zdeněk Slavík; Vladimír Mihál; František Zahálka; Yahia Jabali; V. Vávra; Lenka Kopečná; Jan Mydlil; Jan Trka


Memo – Magazine of European Medical Oncology | 2011

History of treatment and long-term outcome in children with acute lymphoblastic leukemia in the Czech Republic

Jan Starý; Vladimír Mihál; Petr Smisek; Bohumír Blažek; Yahia Jabali; Hana Hrstková; J. Hak; Daniela Prochazkova; Z. Černá; Jaroslav Štěrba; Jan Trka; Ondřej Hrušák; Jan Zuna; Ester Mejstříková; Iveta Janotova; Petr Sedlacek; H. Ptoszková; Dagmar Pospisilova; Kateřina Toušovská; Pavel Timr; V. Vávra; Katerina Zdrahalova; Lucie Sramkova; Zuzana Zemanova; M. Jarošová; P. Gajdoš; O. Hrodek


Archive | 2013

Probable/proven invasive aspergillosis in children with malignancy registered in database FIND, Study on behalf of the Czech Leukemia Study Group for life CELL

Petr Sedlacek; Vanda Chrenková; Peter Múdry; Júlia Horáková; Jan Mužík; Yahia Jabali; Naďa Mallátová; Petr Hubacek; Iva Kocmanová; Barbora Weinbergerová; Zdeněk Ráčil

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Z. Černá

Charles University in Prague

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Daniela Prochazkova

Charles University in Prague

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Jan Starý

Charles University in Prague

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Petr Sedlacek

Charles University in Prague

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P. Gajdoš

Charles University in Prague

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Ester Mejstříková

Charles University in Prague

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Jan Stary

Charles University in Prague

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Ondřej Hrušák

Charles University in Prague

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V. Vávra

Charles University in Prague

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