Life after transplant: are we becoming high maintenance in AML?

Allogeneic hematopoietic cell transplantation (allo-HCT) for patients with AML is increasingly able to impact the historically poor outcomes in this disease. Nonetheless, even with transplant, the rates of post-HCT relapse are unacceptably high, and remain a great challenge in the treatment of patie...

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Veröffentlicht in:Bone marrow transplantation (Basingstoke) 2016-11, Vol.51 (11), p.1423-1430
Hauptverfasser: Brunner, A M, Fathi, A T, Chen, Y B
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container_issue 11
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container_title Bone marrow transplantation (Basingstoke)
container_volume 51
creator Brunner, A M
Fathi, A T
Chen, Y B
description Allogeneic hematopoietic cell transplantation (allo-HCT) for patients with AML is increasingly able to impact the historically poor outcomes in this disease. Nonetheless, even with transplant, the rates of post-HCT relapse are unacceptably high, and remain a great challenge in the treatment of patients with AML. Maintenance therapies after allo-HCT, given to patients at high risk of relapse or with evidence of minimal residual disease (MRD), may provide a way to reduce relapse rates and improve survival. New therapies may offer acceptable toxicity profiles in the post-HCT setting, and investigations are ongoing using hypomethylating agents, histone deacetylase inhibitors, immunomodulatory drugs, targeted tyrosine kinase inhibitors, drug–antibody conjugates and cellular therapies. Future directions in the field of post-HCT therapies may include better risk stratification with MRD, as well as the exploitation of novel mechanisms such as immune checkpoint inhibition and modified chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T cells. In this mini review, we discuss the current landscape of clinical research in post-HCT maintenance therapies, as well as future therapeutic strategies of interest. Although there is great potential for post-HCT agents to improve AML outcomes, these will need to be evaluated prospectively through well-designed randomized clinical trials.
doi_str_mv 10.1038/bmt.2016.160
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subjects 631/67/1059/2325
631/67/1059/602
Acute myelocytic leukemia
Antibodies
Antigens
Antineoplastic Agents - therapeutic use
Bone marrow
Care and treatment
Cell Biology
Chimeric antigen receptors
Clinical trials
Exploitation
Forecasting
Health aspects
Hematology
Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation
Histone deacetylase
Humans
Immune checkpoint inhibitors
Immunomodulation
Immunosuppressive agents
Inhibitors
Internal Medicine
Kinases
Leukemia, Myeloid, Acute - therapy
Lymphocytes
Lymphocytes T
Maintenance
Medicine
Medicine & Public Health
Methods
Minimal residual disease
Neoplasm, Residual - drug therapy
Patient outcomes
Patients
Protein-tyrosine kinase
Public Health
Quality of life
Recurrence
review
Stem cell transplantation
Stem Cells
Toxicity
Transplantation
Transplants & implants
Tyrosine
title Life after transplant: are we becoming high maintenance in AML?
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