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A new study
suggests the chance of a cure is high for leukemia patients who are disease-free
two years after a bone marrow transplant. However, those patients will
still face death rates that are higher than those of the general population.
Those were the findings of a study conducted for the International Bone
Marrow Transplant Registry by an international group of scientists and
published in a recent issue of The New England Journal of Medicine.
The study focused on allogeneic transplants, which involve transplanting
marrow from one person to another of similar genetic makeup, said Ralph
Vogler, MD, scientific program director at the American Cancer Society
(ACS).
The study included 6,691 patients who were disease-free two years after
having a bone marrow transplant to treat leukemia or aplastic anemia, a
condition in which production of blood cells by the bone marrow is severely
reduced. The patients had an 89 percent chance of living for five more
years, the researchers found.
In this study and another study by the European Group for Blood and
Marrow Transplantation, the death rate for patients who survived for five
years after a transplant was about 8 percent – a rate that is higher than
that of the general population. However, patients who had transplants to
treat aplastic anemia had a lower probability of late death than those
who had transplants to treat leukemia.
The researchers said their results should be interpreted with caution
because protocols for transplantation, treatment of complications, and
follow-up were not uniform among patients in the study. In addition, they
said transplantation techniques have changed over the three decades since
the first patients were enrolled in the international registry.
The authors recommended prolonged follow-up of patients who receive
transplants to prevent and treat life-threatening complications or relapse.
Dr. Vogler agreed, saying, "Long-term follow-up is important because
we do not know enough as yet. The significance of this study is that it
demonstrates a decrease in life span even though the patients may be cured
of their original disease…It will take further investigation to determine
what factors are responsible for increasing the risk of death."
E. Donnall Thomas, MD, of Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center, wrote
an editorial accompanying the study. "It is clear that marrow transplantation
does not confer a normal life span. However, the slightly increased
risk of death with the passage of years may not be so bad when one considers
the alternative," wrote Dr. Thomas, a Nobel Prize winner who is a pioneer
in the procedure.
Although high-dose chemotherapy and bone marrow transplantation offer
many leukemia patients the best opportunity for long-term survival, a transplant
is not a good choice for everyone. Some types of leukemia respond very
well to conventional chemotherapy, and a transplant is not necessary. And,
the complication rate after a transplant is quite significant, especially
for older patients and those with other serious health problems. Many previous
studies have been done to determine which people with leukemia are likely
to benefit from a bone marrow transplant. ACS News Center stories are provided as a source of cancer-related
news and are not intended to be used as
press releases.
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