Abstract

ASTA-Z-7557, an in vitro active metabolite of cyclophosphamide, has recently been introduced to purge autologous bone marrow grafts of patients with AML. The rationale of this approach assumes a relatively higher sensitivity of leukemic cells to the drug as compared to that of normal marrow precursors. We have investigated in direct comparison the sensitivity to ASTA-Z-7557 of normal bone marrow progenitors (GM-CFC and BFU-E) and clonogenic leukemic cells (L-CFC). Normal bone marrow cells and purified leukemic blast cells were exposed to varying concentrations of the drug. Dose-response relationships did not indicate a selective cytotoxic susceptibility of L-CFC to ASTA-Z-7557. The recovery of bone marrow precursors following exposure to ASTA-Z-7557 depended on the cell concentration during exposure and was higher for 2 × 10 7 cells/ml than for 1 × 10 6/ml. To mimic minimal residual leukemia cell mixtures of 95% irradiated normal bone marrow cells with 5% leukemic blast cells were exposed to ASTA-Z-7557. In this mixture killing of L-CFC was largely decreased. These data suggest that in vitro incubation of autologous bone marrow grafts of patients with minimal residual leukemia with ASTA-Z-7557 might not offer a therapeutic advantage.

Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call