Publication | Closed Access
Marrow Transplantation for Acute Nonlymphoblastic Leukemia in First Remission
646
Citations
13
References
1979
Year
Hematological MalignancyIdentical TwinsTransplantationMarrow TransplantationOncologyHealth SciencesMixed-phenotype Acute LeukemiaMalignant Blood DisorderStem Cell TransplantationHematologyImmunologyCell TransplantationBlood TransplantationImmunotherapyMedicineRadiation OncologyCancer ResearchIntensive Chemoradiotherapy
MARROW transplantation provides the opportunity for aggressive antileukemic therapy without regard to marrow toxicity.1 We have reported the application of this approach combined with intensive chemoradiotherapy in patients with several classes of leukemia; these patients had received the maximum benefit of combination chemotherapy and were considered to be in the end stages of the disease.2 Marrow donors were either identical twins or HLA-identical siblings. Six of 16 recipients of syngeneic marrow and 14 of 110 recipients of allogeneic marrow are still in remission after four to nine years.3 , 4 The allogeneic recipients included 54 patients with acute nonlymphoblastic leukemia, six of . . .
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