Abstract

High-dose chemotherapy with autologous bone marrow support (ABMS) achieves prolonged relapse-free survival in relapsed lymphomas and leukemias and has provided durable complete responses in certain solid tumors. The principal morbidity and mortality result from the infectious and bleeding complications during the 3-4 week aplasia until the bone marrow autograft can recover. Hematopoietic growth factors, alone or used after chemotherapy, increase the number of circulating progenitor cells in the peripheral blood compartment. In one trial, 12 patients with solid tumors were treated with high-dose chemotherapy and supported with both bone marrow and peripheral blood progenitor cells (PBPC) collected after GM-CSF administration. Reconstitution of bone marrow function occurred quickly (ANC greater than 500/microliters by day 17; platelet-transfusion independence by day 16), resulting in short hospital stays (median, 28 days). In a second study, 12 patients with metastatic breast cancer responding to induction chemotherapy (doxorubicin, 5-fluorouracil, and methotrexate) were given GM-CSF during induction to collect PBPCs during leukocyte recovery. These PBPCs were used as the sole hematopoietic support during high-dose chemotherapy with cyclophosphamide, thiotepa, and carboplatin. Granulocyte and platelet reconstitution were extremely rapid (median, 14 and 12 days, respectively). When compared with 29 patients undergoing the same intensification therapy using ABMT as sole support, time to hematopoietic recovery, transfusion requirements, and duration of hospital stay were all significantly improved for the patients receiving PBPC. PBPC with or without marrow may enhance the safety, tolerance, and cost of high-dose therapy. Moreover, PBPC may render multiple course combination, high-dose therapy feasible.

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