201 results on '"Shouval, R."'
Search Results
2. Machine learning based predictive modeling for mortality 100 days post allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (ALLO-HSCT) in acute leukemia: an EBMT-Acute Leukemia Working Party (ALWP) registry study [Abstract]
- Author
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Shouval, R., Labopin, M., Bondi, O., Mishan-Shamay, H., Shimoni, A., Ciceri, F., Esteve, J., Giebel, S., Gorin, N.-C., Schmid, Christoph, Zakaria, I., Moukhtari, L., Polge, E., Aljurf, M., Kroger, N., Craddock, C., Bacigalupo, A., Cornelissen, J., Baron, F., Unger, R., Nagler, A., and Mohty, M.
- Published
- 2022
3. Radiotherapy for Relapse after Chimeric Antigen Receptor T Cell Therapy in Hematologic Malignancies
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Hubbeling, H.G., primary, Silverman, E.A., additional, Tomas, A. Alarcon, additional, Tringale, K.R., additional, Wijetunga, N.A., additional, Hajj, C., additional, Mailankody, S., additional, Batlevi, C.L., additional, Dahi, P.B., additional, Giralt, S.A., additional, Lin, R.J., additional, Park, J.H., additional, Scordo, M., additional, Sauter, C.S., additional, Shah, G.L., additional, Perales, M.A., additional, Palomba, M.L., additional, Shouval, R., additional, Yahalom, J., additional, and Imber, B.S., additional
- Published
- 2022
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4. Patterns of Relapse and Risk Reduction Following Tumor Debulking by Bridging Radiotherapy prior to Chimeric Antigen Receptor T Cell Therapy in Non-Hodgkin Lymphoma
- Author
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Hubbeling, H.G., primary, Silverman, E.A., additional, Michaud, L., additional, Flynn, J., additional, Devlin, S., additional, Wijetunga, N.A., additional, Tomas, A. Alarcon, additional, Shouval, R., additional, Palomba, M.L., additional, Batlevi, C.L., additional, Dahi, P.B., additional, Park, J.H., additional, Scordo, M., additional, Sauter, C.S., additional, Shah, G.L., additional, Schoder, H., additional, Perales, M.A., additional, Hajj, C., additional, Yahalom, J., additional, and Imber, B.S., additional
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- 2022
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5. Improvement in Radiomic Features Following Bridging Therapy is Prognostic for CD19 Chimeric Antigen Receptor (CAR) T-Cell Therapy Outcome
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Hubbeling, H.G., Leithner, D., Silverman, E.A., Flynn, J., Devlin, S., Shah, G.L., Fregonese, B., Bedmutha, A., Boardman, A., Dahi, P.B., Lin, R.J., Park, J.H., Scordo, M., Salles, G., Yahalom, J., Palomba, M.L., Schoder, H., Perales, M.A., Shouval, R., and Imber, B.S.
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- 2024
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6. P1108: HIGH COMPLETE RESPONSE RATE FOLLOWING POINT-OF-CARE ANTI CD19 CAR T-CELL THERAPY IN PATIENTS WITH RELAPSED/REFRACTORY FOLLICULAR LYMPHOMA
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Fried, S., primary, Besser, M. J., additional, Shkury, E., additional, Yerushalmi, R., additional, Shem-Tov, N., additional, Danylesko, I., additional, Jacoby, E., additional, Itzhaki, O., additional, Shouval, R., additional, Kedmi, M., additional, Shimoni, A., additional, Nagler, A., additional, and Avigdor, A., additional
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- 2022
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7. Application of machine learning algorithms for clinical predictive modeling: a data-mining approach in SCT
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Shouval, R, Bondi, O, Mishan, H, Shimoni, A, Unger, R, and Nagler, A
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- 2014
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8. How to Use Risk Factors for Outcome Prediction in Patients: Experience in Umbilical Cord Blood Transplantation with a Data Mining Approach: SC03.4
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Shouval, R.
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- 2016
9. Correction: Redefining and measuring transplant conditioning intensity in current era: a study in acute myeloid leukemia patients (Bone Marrow Transplantation, (2020), 55, 6, (1114-1125), 10.1038/s41409-020-0803-y)
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Spyridonidis A., Labopin M., Savani B. N., Niittyvuopio R., Blaise D., Craddock C., Socie G., Platzbecker U., Beelen D., Milpied N., Cornelissen J. J., Ganser A., Huynh A., Griskevicius L., Giebel S., Aljurf M., Brissot E., Malard F., Esteve J., Peric Z., Baron F., Ruggeri A., Schmid C., Gilleece M., Gorin N. -C., Lanza F., Shouval R., Versluis J., Bug G., Floisand Y., Ciceri F., Sanz J., Bazarbachi A., Nagler A., Mohty M., Spyridonidis, A., Labopin, M., Savani, B. N., Niittyvuopio, R., Blaise, D., Craddock, C., Socie, G., Platzbecker, U., Beelen, D., Milpied, N., Cornelissen, J. J., Ganser, A., Huynh, A., Griskevicius, L., Giebel, S., Aljurf, M., Brissot, E., Malard, F., Esteve, J., Peric, Z., Baron, F., Ruggeri, A., Schmid, C., Gilleece, M., Gorin, N. -C., Lanza, F., Shouval, R., Versluis, J., Bug, G., Floisand, Y., Ciceri, F., Sanz, J., Bazarbachi, A., Nagler, A., and Mohty, M.
- Abstract
An amendment to this paper has been published and can be accessed via a link at the top of the paper.
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- 2020
10. PCSK9 inhibitors associated hyperglycemic disorders: a real world, pharmacovigilance study
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Goldman, A G, primary, Raschi, E R, additional, Cukierman-Yaffe, T Y, additional, Dankner, R D, additional, Shouval, R S, additional, Shechter, M D, additional, Ben-Zvi, I B Z, additional, and Maor, E M, additional
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- 2021
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11. COMORBIDITIES AND ALLO-SCT FOR AML: WHERE DO WE STAND?: WP-O003
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Nagler, A., Shouval, R., Labopin, M., Cornelissen, J., and Mohty, M.
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- 2014
12. MACHINE LEARNING BASED PREDICTIVE MODELING FOR MORTALITY 100 DAYS POST ALLOGENEIC HEMATOPOIETIC STEM CELL TRANSPLANTATION (ALLO-HSCT) IN ACUTE LEUKEMIA: AN EBMT- ACUTE LEUKEMIA WORKING PARTY (ALWP) REGISTRY STUDY: PH-O072
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Shouval, R., Labopin, M., Bondi, O., Mishan-Shamay, H., Shimoni, A., Ciceri, F., Esteve, J., Giebel, S., Gorin, N.-C., Schmid, C., Zakaria, I., Moukhtari, L., Polge, E., Aljurf, M., Kroger, N., Craddock, C., Bacigalupo, A., Cornelissen, J., Baron, F., Unger, R., Nagler, A., and Mohty, M.
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- 2014
13. CNS radiotherapy as bridging prior to CAR T‐cell therapy for hematologic malignancies.
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Cederquist, G., Hubbeling, H., Tringale, K., Shah, G., Tomas, A. Alarcon, Shouval, R., Hajj, C., Fregonese, B., Lee, J., Dahi, P. B., Lin, R. J., Palomba, M. L., Perales, M., Salles, G., Falchi, L., Grommes, C., Scordo, M., Yahalom, J., and Imber, B. S.
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HEMATOLOGIC malignancies ,T cells ,RADIOTHERAPY ,CYTOKINE release syndrome ,SCIENCE education - Abstract
CNS radiotherapy as bridging prior to CAR T-cell therapy for hematologic malignancies B Introduction: b Up to 80% of patients who receive CAR T-cell therapy for central nervous system lymphoma (CNSL) require bridging therapy, yet optimal regimens remain undefined. B Conclusion: b Preliminary data suggest CNS-BRT can achieve cytoreduction as bridging therapy prior to CAR T therapy, and may not increase the risk of high-grade CRS and ICANS, though the sample size is limited. [Extracted from the article]
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- 2023
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14. IMPACT OF RESPONSE TO SYSTEMIC BRIDGING THERAPY ON CLINICAL OUTCOMES AND CYTOKINE PROFILE IN PATIENTS RECEIVING CAR T‐CELL THERAPY FOR AGGRESSIVE B‐CELL LYMPHOMA.
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Wills, B., Shouval, R., Flynn, J., Devlin, S. M., Shah, G. L., Scordo, M., P. B. Dahi, Lin, R. J., Imber, B., Parascondola, A., Saldia, A., Landego, I., Ip, A., Leslie, L., Suh, H., Salles, G., Perales, M., and Palomba, M. L.
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TREATMENT effectiveness ,T cells ,CYTOKINES - Abstract
IMPACT OF RESPONSE TO SYSTEMIC BRIDGING THERAPY ON CLINICAL OUTCOMES AND CYTOKINE PROFILE IN PATIENTS RECEIVING CAR T-CELL THERAPY FOR AGGRESSIVE B-CELL LYMPHOMA B Background b : It is unclear whether a deeper response to bridging therapy (BT) before chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T cell therapy improves CAR-T treatment outcome in large B cell lymphoma (LBCL). Further studies are required to evaluate which BT strategies may reduce tumor burden and optimize the inflammatory cytokine environment for improved outcomes after CAR -T cell therapy. [Extracted from the article]
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- 2023
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15. Clinical practice recommendation on hematopoietic stem cell transplantation for acute myeloid leukemia patients with FLT3-internal tandem duplication: a position statement from the Acute Leukemia Working Party of the European Society for Blood and Marrow Transplantation
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Bazarbachi, A., Bug, G. (Gesine), Baron, F. (Frederic), Brissot, E, Ciceri, F, Abou Dalle, I., Döhner, H. (Hartmut), Esteve, J. (Jordi), Floisand, Y., Giebel, S. (Sebastian), Gilleece, M., Gorin, N.C., Jabbour, J. (Jason), Aljurf, M, Kantarjian, H. (Hagop), Kharfan-Dabaja, M., Labopin, M. (Myriam), Lanza, F. (Francesco), Malard, F, Peric, Z., Prebet, T. (Thomas), Ravandi, F, Ruggeri, A. (Annelisa), Sanz, J. (Jaime), Schmid, C. (Christoph), Shouval, R, Spyridonidis, A., Versluis, J., Vey, N. (Norbert), Savani, BN, Nagler, A. (Arnon), Mohty, M. (Mohamad), Bazarbachi, A., Bug, G. (Gesine), Baron, F. (Frederic), Brissot, E, Ciceri, F, Abou Dalle, I., Döhner, H. (Hartmut), Esteve, J. (Jordi), Floisand, Y., Giebel, S. (Sebastian), Gilleece, M., Gorin, N.C., Jabbour, J. (Jason), Aljurf, M, Kantarjian, H. (Hagop), Kharfan-Dabaja, M., Labopin, M. (Myriam), Lanza, F. (Francesco), Malard, F, Peric, Z., Prebet, T. (Thomas), Ravandi, F, Ruggeri, A. (Annelisa), Sanz, J. (Jaime), Schmid, C. (Christoph), Shouval, R, Spyridonidis, A., Versluis, J., Vey, N. (Norbert), Savani, BN, Nagler, A. (Arnon), and Mohty, M. (Mohamad)
- Abstract
The FMS-like tyrosine kinase 3 (FLT3) gene is mutated in 25-30% of patients with acute myeloid leukemia (AML). Because of the poor prognosis associated with FLT3-internal tandem duplication mutated AML, allogeneic hematopoietic stem-cell transplantation (SCT) was commonly performed in first complete remission. Remarkable progress has been made in frontline treatments with the incorporation of FLT3 inhibitors and the development of highly sensitive minimal/measurable residual disease assays. Similarly, recent progress in allogeneic hematopoietic SCT includes improvement of transplant techniques, the use of haplo-identical donors in patients lacking an HLA matched donor, and the introduction of FLT3 inhibitors as post-transplant maintenance therapy. Nevertheless, current transplant strategies vary between centers and differ in terms of transplant indications based on the internal tandem duplication allelic ratio and concomitant nucleophosmin-1 mutation, as well as in terms of post-transplant maintenance/consolidation. This review generated by international leukemia or transplant experts, mostly from the European Society for Blood and Marrow Transplantation, attempts to develop a position statement on best approaches for allogeneic hematopoietic SCT for AML with FLT3-internal tandem duplication including indications for and modalities of such transplants and on the potential optimization of post-transplant maintenance with FLT inhibitors.
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- 2020
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16. Deconstructing tumor heterogeneity : The stromal perspective
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Vickman, R. E., Faget, D. V., Beachy, P., Beebe, D., Bhowmick, N. A., Cukierman, E., Deng, W. -M, Granneman, J. G., Hildesheim, J., Kalluri, R., Lau, K. S., Lengyel, E., Lundeberg, Joakim, Moscat, J., Nelson, P. S., Pietras, K., Politi, K., Puré, E., Scherz-Shouval, R., Sherman, M. H., Tuveson, D., Weeraratna, A. T., White, R. M., Wong, M. H., Woodhouse, E. C., Zheng, Y., Hayward, S. W., Stewart, S. A., Vickman, R. E., Faget, D. V., Beachy, P., Beebe, D., Bhowmick, N. A., Cukierman, E., Deng, W. -M, Granneman, J. G., Hildesheim, J., Kalluri, R., Lau, K. S., Lengyel, E., Lundeberg, Joakim, Moscat, J., Nelson, P. S., Pietras, K., Politi, K., Puré, E., Scherz-Shouval, R., Sherman, M. H., Tuveson, D., Weeraratna, A. T., White, R. M., Wong, M. H., Woodhouse, E. C., Zheng, Y., Hayward, S. W., and Stewart, S. A.
- Abstract
Significant advances have been made towards understanding the role of immune cell-tumor interplay in either suppressing or promoting tumor growth, progression, and recurrence, however, the roles of additional stromal elements, cell types and/or cell states remain ill-defined. The overarching goal of this NCI-sponsored workshop was to highlight and integrate the critical functions of non-immune stromal components in regulating tumor heterogeneity and its impact on tumor initiation, progression, and resistance to therapy. The workshop explored the opposing roles of tumor supportive versus suppressive stroma and how cellular composition and function may be altered during disease progression. It also highlighted microenvironment-centered mechanisms dictating indolence or aggressiveness of early lesions and how spatial geography impacts stromal attributes and function. The prognostic and therapeutic implications as well as potential vulnerabilities within the heterogeneous tumor microenvironment were also discussed. These broad topics were included in this workshop as an effort to identify current challenges and knowledge gaps in the field. Copyright, QC 20210330
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- 2020
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17. Clinical practice recommendation on hematopoietic stem cell transplantation for acute myeloid leukemia patients with FLT3-internal tandem duplication: a position statement from the Acute Leukemia Working Party of the European Society for Blood and Marrow Transplantation
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Bazarbachi, A, Bug, G, Baron, F, Brissot, E, Ciceri, F, Abou Dalle, I, Dohner, H, Esteve, J, Floisand, Y, Giebel, S, Gilleece, M, Gorin, NC, Jabbour, E, Aljurf, M, Kantarjian, H, Kharfan-Dabaja, M, Labopin, M, Lanza, F, Malard, F, Peric, Z, Prebet, T, Ravandi, F, Ruggeri, A, Sanz, J, Schmid, C, Shouval, R, Spyridonidis, A, Versluis, Jurjen, Vey, N, Savani, BN, Nagler, A, Mohty, M, Bazarbachi, A, Bug, G, Baron, F, Brissot, E, Ciceri, F, Abou Dalle, I, Dohner, H, Esteve, J, Floisand, Y, Giebel, S, Gilleece, M, Gorin, NC, Jabbour, E, Aljurf, M, Kantarjian, H, Kharfan-Dabaja, M, Labopin, M, Lanza, F, Malard, F, Peric, Z, Prebet, T, Ravandi, F, Ruggeri, A, Sanz, J, Schmid, C, Shouval, R, Spyridonidis, A, Versluis, Jurjen, Vey, N, Savani, BN, Nagler, A, and Mohty, M
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- 2020
18. Improved symptom management by use of medical cannabis: N1245
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Radiano, R., Or, R., Shouval, R., Mechoulam, R., and Abu-Zaid, B.
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- 2011
19. Efficacy and tolerability of clindamycin phosphate and salicylic acid gel in the treatment of mild to moderate acne vulgaris
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Touitou, E, Godin, B, Shumilov, M, Bishouty, N, Ainbinder, D, Shouval, R, Ingber, A, and Leibovici, V
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- 2008
20. PS1030 COMPLETE REMISSION WITH INCOMPLETE BLOOD COUNT RECOVERY IS A STRONG PREDICTOR OF NON-RELAPSE MORTALITY IN ACUTE MYELOID LEUKEMIA PATIENTS UNDERGOING ALLOGENEIC STEM CELL TRANSPLANTATION
- Author
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Danylesko, I., primary, Shouval, R., additional, Fein, J., additional, Shem-Tov, N., additional, Yerushalmi, R., additional, Shimoni, A., additional, and Nagler, A., additional
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- 2019
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21. Indications for haematopoietic stem cell transplantation for haematological diseases, solid tumours and immune disorders : current practice in Europe, 2019
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Duarte, R.F., Labopin, M., Bader, P., Basak, G.W., Bonini, C., Chabannon, C., Corbacioglu, S., Dreger, P., Dufour, C., Genneryl, A.R., Kuball, J., Lankester, A.C., Lanza, F., Montoto, S., Nagler, A., Latour, R.P. de, Snowden, J.A., Styczynski, J., Yakoub-Agha, I., Kroger, N., Mohty, M., Albert, M., Alexander, T., Averbuch, D., Baron, F., Bazarbachi, E., Beksac, M., Brissot, E., Bug, G., Cesaro, S., Chalandon, Y., Ciceri, F., Czerw, T., Dazzi, F., Esteve, J., Fleischhauer, K., Garderet, L., Giebel, S., Gil, L., Gilleece, M., Gorin, N.C., Hayden, P., Halter, J., Boluda, J.C.H., Hudecek, M., Kleinschmidt, K., Kenyon, M., Koenecke, C., Locatelli, F., Malard, F., McLornan, D., Mikulska, M., Murray, J., Onida, F., Pedrazzoli, P., Penack, O., Peric, Z., Risitano, A., Robin, M., Robinson, S., Ruggeri, A., Sanz, J., Savani, B., Schetelig, J., Schied, C., Schmid, C., Schoemans, H., Schonland, S., Sharrack, B., Shouval, R., Spyridonidis, A., Toubert, A., Tourniac, O., Urbano-Ispizua, A., Vago, L., Gelder, M. van, Verhoeven, B., Versluis, J., Wietten, L., Willasch, A., European Soc Blood Marrow Transpla, Duarte, R. F., Labopin, M., Bader, P., Basak, G. W., Bonini, C., Chabannon, C., Corbacioglu, S., Dreger, P., Dufour, C., Gennery, A. R., Kuball, J., Lankester, A. C., Lanza, F., Montoto, S., Nagler, A., Peffault de Latour, R., Snowden, J. A., Styczynski, J., Yakoub-Agha, I., Kroger, N., Mohty, M, and on behalf of the European Society forBlood and Marrow Transplantation, (EBMT)
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Transplantation Conditioning ,medicine.medical_treatment ,MEDLINE ,Disease ,Hematopoietic stem cell transplantation ,History, 21st Century ,NO ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Neoplasms ,medicine ,Humans ,Intensive care medicine ,Multiple myeloma ,Accreditation ,Transplantation ,business.industry ,Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation ,Hematology ,medicine.disease ,Hematologic Diseases ,Europe ,Immune System Diseases ,Hematologic disease ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,business ,030215 immunology - Abstract
This is the seventh special EBMT report on the indications for haematopoietic stem cell transplantation for haematological diseases, solid tumours and immune disorders. Our aim is to provide general guidance on transplant indications according to prevailing clinical practice in EBMT countries and centres. In order to inform patient decisions, these recommendations must be considered together with the risk of the disease, the risk of the transplant procedure and the results of non-transplant strategies. In over two decades since the first report, the EBMT indications manuscripts have incorporated changes in transplant practice coming from scientific and technical developments in the field. In this same period, the establishment of JACIE accreditation has promoted high quality and led to improved outcomes of patient and donor care and laboratory performance in transplantation and cellular therapy. An updated report with operating definitions, revised indications and an additional set of data with overall survival at 1 year and non-relapse mortality at day 100 after transplant in the commonest standard-of-care indications is presented. Additional efforts are currently underway to enable EBMT member centres to benchmark their risk-adapted outcomes as part of the Registry upgrade Project 2020 against national and/or international outcome data.
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- 2019
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22. POINT‐OF‐CARE ANTI‐BCMA CAR T‐CELL THERAPY INDUCES ENCOURAGING RESPONSE RATES IN HIGH‐RISK RELAPSED/REFRACTORY MULTIPLE MYELOMA.
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Magen, H., Fried, S., Itzhaki, O., Shem‐Tov, N., Danylesko, I., Yerushalmi, R., Marcus, R., Shouval, R., Nevo, L., Shapira‐Frommer, R., Nagler, A., Shimoni, A., Shkury, E., and Avigdor, A.
- Subjects
MULTIPLE myeloma ,T cells ,CHIMERIC antigen receptors ,CYTOKINE release syndrome ,POINT-of-care testing - Abstract
B Introduction: b Anti-BCMA chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T-cell therapy showed excellent efficacy in patients with relapsed/refractory multiple myeloma (R/R MM). We report outcomes of phase 1b/2 single-center clinical trial of autologous POC anti-BCMA CAR T-cell therapy in patients (pts) with R/R MM treated with >=3 prior therapies (NCT05243212). POINT-OF-CARE ANTI-BCMA CAR T-CELL THERAPY INDUCES ENCOURAGING RESPONSE RATES IN HIGH-RISK RELAPSED/REFRACTORY MULTIPLE MYELOMA. [Extracted from the article]
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- 2023
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23. Application of machine learning algorithms for clinical predictive modeling: a data-mining approach in SCT
- Author
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Shouval, R, primary, Bondi, O, additional, Mishan, H, additional, Shimoni, A, additional, Unger, R, additional, and Nagler, A, additional
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- 2013
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24. Efficacy and tolerability of clindamycin phosphate and salicylic acid gel in the treatment of mild to moderate acne vulgaris
- Author
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Touitou, E, primary, Godin, B, additional, Shumilov, M, additional, Bishouty, N, additional, Ainbinder, D, additional, Shouval, R, additional, Ingber, A, additional, and Leibovici, V, additional
- Published
- 2007
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- View/download PDF
25. Prediction of non-relapse mortality in patients with AML and all receiving alloSCT in first CR with post-transplantation cyclophosphamide-based GVHD prophylaxis
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Hermans, S. J. F., Versluis, J., Labopin, M., Giebel, S., Norden, Y., Alexander Kulagin, Blaise, D., Diez Martin, J. L., Meijer, E., Rovira, M., Choi, G., Raiola, A. M., Koc, Y., Remenyi, P., Vydra, J., Kroeger, N., Sica, S., Martino, M., Gerkom, G., Chevallier, P., Busca, A., Herrera Arroyo, C., Brissot, E., Peric, Z., Nagler, A., Shouval, R., Ciceri, F., Cornelissen, J. J., and Mohty, M.
26. Development and validation of a disease risk stratification system for patients with haematological malignancies: a retrospective cohort study of the European Society for Blood and Marrow Transplantation registry
- Author
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Myriam Labopin, Miguel-Angel Perales, Jurjen Versluis, Richard J. O'Reilly, Ibrahim Yakoub-Agha, Esperanza B. Papadopoulos, Maria H. Gilleece, Fabio Ciceri, Ann A. Jakubowski, Jacques-Emmanuel Galimard, Roni Tamari, Christoph Schmid, Annalisa Ruggeri, Ali Bazarbachi, Sergio Giralt, Selim Corbacioglu, Sebastian Giebel, Gesine Bug, Zinaida Peric, Joshua A Fein, Roni Shouval, Mohamad Mohty, Bipin N. Savani, Craig S. Sauter, Arnon Nagler, Jaime Sanz, Alexandros Spyridonidis, Silvia Montoto, Frédéric Baron, Christina Cho, Shouval, R., Fein, J. A., Labopin, M., Cho, C., Bazarbachi, A., Baron, F., Bug, G., Ciceri, F., Corbacioglu, S., Galimard, J. -E., Giebel, S., Gilleece, M. H., Giralt, S., Jakubowski, A., Montoto, S., O'Reilly, R. J., Papadopoulos, E. B., Peric, Z., Ruggeri, A., Sanz, J., Sauter, C. S., Savani, B. N., Schmid, C., Spyridonidis, A., Tamari, R., Versluis, J., Yakoub-Agha, I., Perales, M. A., Mohty, M., Nagler, A., and Hematology
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Hematopoietic stem cell transplantation ,Cohort Studies ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Risk Factors ,Internal medicine ,Humans ,Transplantation, Homologous ,Medicine ,Registries ,Survival rate ,Societies, Medical ,Proportional Hazards Models ,Retrospective Studies ,business.industry ,Proportional hazards model ,Hazard ratio ,Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation ,Retrospective cohort study ,Hematology ,Middle Aged ,Prognosis ,Survival Rate ,Transplantation ,surgical procedures, operative ,Hematologic Neoplasms ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Cohort ,Female ,business ,030215 immunology ,Cohort study - Abstract
Background: Diagnosis and remission status at the time of allogeneic haematopoietic stem-cell transplantation (HSCT) are the principal determinants of overall survival following transplantation. We sought to develop a contemporary disease-risk stratification system (DRSS) that accounts for heterogeneous transplantation indications. Methods: In this retrospective cohort study we included 55 histology and remission status combinations across haematological malignancies, including acute leukaemia, lymphoma, multiple myeloma, and myeloproliferative and myelodysplastic disorders. A total of 47 265 adult patients (aged ≥18 years) who received an allogeneic HSCT between Jan 1, 2012, and Dec 31, 2016, and were reported to the European Society for Blood and Marrow Transplantation registry were included. We divided EBMT patients into derivation (n=25 534), tuning (n=18 365), and geographical validation (n=3366) cohorts. Disease combinations were ranked in a multivariable Cox regression for overall survival in the derivation cohort, cutoff for risk groups were evaluated for the tuning cohort, and the selected system was tested on the geographical validation cohort. An independent single-centre US cohort of 660 patients transplanted between Jan 1, 2010, and Dec 31, 2015 was used to externally validate the results. Findings: The DRSS model stratified patients in the derivation cohort (median follow-up was 2·1 years [IQR 1·0–3·2]) into five risk groups with increasing mortality risk: low risk (reference group), intermediate-1 (hazard ratio for overall survival 1·26 [95% CI 1·17–1·36], p
- Published
- 2021
27. Measurable residual disease (MRD) testing for acute leukemia in EBMT transplant centers: a survey on behalf of the ALWP of the EBMT
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Christoph Schmid, Roni Shouval, Sebastian Giebel, Annalisa Ruggeri, Gesine Bug, Fabio Ciceri, Mohamad Mohty, Alexandros Spyridonidis, Eolia Brissot, Jaime Sanz, Frédéric Baron, Ali Bazarbachi, Zinaida Peric, Arnon Nagler, Bipin N. Savani, Francesco Lanza, Maria H. Gilleece, Myriam Labopin, Jurjen Versluis, Emmanuel Polge, Jordi Esteve, Norbert-Claude Gorin, Nagler, A., Baron, F., Labopin, M., Polge, E., Esteve, J., Bazarbachi, A., Brissot, E., Bug, G., Ciceri, F., Giebel, S., Gilleece, M. H., Gorin, N. -C., Lanza, F., Peric, Z., Ruggeri, A., Sanz, J., Savani, B. N., Schmid, C., Shouval, R., Spyridonidis, A., Versluis, J., Mohty, M., and Hematology
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Prognostic factor ,Neoplasm, Residual ,Transplantation Conditioning ,Lymphoblastic Leukemia ,Disease ,ACUTE MYELOID-LEUKEMIA ,Routine practice ,Acute myeloblastic leukemia ,RELAPSE ,NO ,HEMATOPOIETIC-CELL TRANSPLANTATION ,AML ,Measurable residual disease (MRD), acute leukemia, Acute myeloblastic leukemia, allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation ,Internal medicine ,hemic and lymphatic diseases ,medicine ,Humans ,Transplantation, Homologous ,acute leukemia ,allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation ,Multiparameter flow cytometry ,LYMPHOBLASTIC-LEUKEMIA ,RISK ,Transplantation ,Acute leukemia ,business.industry ,FLOW-CYTOMETRY ,Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation ,Myeloid leukemia ,Hematology ,ADULTS ,Flow Cytometry ,body regions ,Leukemia, Myeloid, Acute ,Measurable residual disease (MRD) ,business - Abstract
Detectable measurable residual disease (MRD) is a key prognostic factor in both acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) and acute myeloid leukemia (AML) patients. Thus, we conducted a survey in EBMT transplant centers focusing on pre- and post-allo-HCT MRD. One hundred and six centers from 29 countries responded. One hundred had a formal strategy for routine MRD assessment, 91 for both ALL and AML. For ALL (n = 95), assessing MRD has been routine practice starting from 2010 (range, 1990–2019). Techniques used for MRD assessment consisted of PCR techniques alone (n = 27), multiparameter flow cytometry (MFC, n = 16), both techniques (n = 43), next-generation sequencing (NGS) + PCR (n = 2), or PCR + MFC + NGS (n = 7). The majority of centers assessed MRD every 2–3 months for 2 (range, 1-until relapse) years. For AML, assessing MRD was routine in 92 centers starting in 2010 (range 1990–2019). Assessment of MRD was by PCR (n = 23), MFC (n = 13), both PCR and MFC (n = 39), both PCR and NGS (n = 3), and by all three techniques (n = 14). The majority assesses MRD for AML every 2–3 months for 2 (range, 1-until relapse) years. This survey is the first step in the aim to include MRD status as a routine registry capture parameter in acute leukemia.
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- 2021
28. Management of patients with acute leukemia during the COVID-19 outbreak: practical guidelines from the acute leukemia working party of the European Society for Blood and Marrow Transplantation
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Myriam Labopin, Sebastian Giebel, Annalisa Ruggeri, Zinaida Peric, Jordi Esteve, Mohamad Mohty, Norbert Claude Gorin, Jurjen Versluis, Jaime Sanz, Gesine Bug, Eolia Brissot, Arnon Nagler, Ali Bazarbachi, Maria H. Gilleece, Fabio Ciceri, Frédéric Baron, Francesco Lanza, Roni Shouval, Christoph Schmid, Bipin N. Savani, Alexandros Spyridonidis, Centre de Recherche Saint-Antoine (CR Saint-Antoine), Sorbonne Université (SU)-Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale (INSERM)-CHU Saint-Antoine [AP-HP], Assistance publique - Hôpitaux de Paris (AP-HP) (AP-HP)-Sorbonne Université (SU)-Assistance publique - Hôpitaux de Paris (AP-HP) (AP-HP)-Sorbonne Université (SU), Université de Liège, American University of Beirut Faculty of Medicine and Medical Center (AUB), Goethe-University Frankfurt am Main, Universita Vita Salute San Raffaele = Vita-Salute San Raffaele University [Milan, Italie] (UniSR), Barcelona Centre for International Health Research, Hospital Clinic (CRESIB), Universitat de Barcelona (UB), Maria Sklodowska-Curie Memorial Cancer Center and Institute of Oncology (MCMCC), Leeds Institute of Cancer and Pathology [U.K.], Service d'hématologie clinique et de thérapie cellulaire [CHU Saint-Antoine], Assistance publique - Hôpitaux de Paris (AP-HP) (AP-HP)-CHU Saint-Antoine [AP-HP], Assistance publique - Hôpitaux de Paris (AP-HP) (AP-HP)-Sorbonne Université (SU)-Sorbonne Université (SU), Alma Mater Studiorum University of Bologna (UNIBO), University Hospital Center Rebro, Universitat de València (UV), Vanderbilt University Medical Center [Nashville], Vanderbilt University [Nashville], Universität Augsburg [Augsburg], Memorial Sloane Kettering Cancer Center [New York], General University Hospital of Patras, Erasmus University Medical Center [Rotterdam] (Erasmus MC), Chaim Sheba Medical Center, Hematology, Gestionnaire, HAL Sorbonne Université 5, Centre de Recherche Saint-Antoine (CRSA), Assistance publique - Hôpitaux de Paris (AP-HP) (AP-HP)-Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale (INSERM)-Sorbonne Université (SU), Brissot, E., Labopin, M., Baron, F., Bazarbachi, A., Bug, G., Ciceri, F., Esteve, J., Giebel, S., Gilleece, M. H., Gorin, N. -C., Lanza, F., Peric, Z., Ruggeri, A., Sanz, J., Savani, B. N., Schmid, C., Shouval, R., Spyridonidis, A., Versluis, J., Nagler, A., and Mohty, M.
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2019-20 coronavirus outbreak ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Tissue and Organ Procurement ,Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) ,[SDV]Life Sciences [q-bio] ,Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) ,chemotherapy ,NO ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Risk Factors ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Leukaemia ,Humans ,Acute leukemia, COVID-19, chemotherapy, aplasia, immune-deficiency ,Pandemics ,Societies, Medical ,ComputingMilieux_MISCELLANEOUS ,[SDV.MP.VIR] Life Sciences [q-bio]/Microbiology and Parasitology/Virology ,Acute leukemia ,Transplantation ,Leukemia ,SARS-CoV-2 ,business.industry ,Marrow transplantation ,Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation ,COVID-19 ,Outbreak ,Hematology ,Precursor Cell Lymphoblastic Leukemia-Lymphoma ,3. Good health ,Europe ,[SDV] Life Sciences [q-bio] ,Leukemia, Myeloid, Acute ,aplasia ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Perspective ,[SDV.MP.VIR]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Microbiology and Parasitology/Virology ,immune-deficiency ,business ,Haematological diseases ,030215 immunology - Abstract
International audience
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- 2020
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29. Prediction of Allogeneic Hematopoietic Stem-Cell Transplantation Mortality 100 Days After Transplantation Using a Machine Learning Algorithm: A European Group for Blood and Marrow Transplantation Acute Leukemia Working Party Retrospective Data Mining Study
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Frédéric Baron, Charles Craddock, Andrea Bacigalupo, Avichai Shimoni, Ori Bondi, Sebastian Giebel, Norbert Claude Gorin, Christoph Schmid, Jan J. Cornelissen, Myriam Labopin, Emmanuelle Polge, Jordi Esteve, Ron Unger, Roni Shouval, Arnon Nagler, Nicolaus Kröger, Mahmoud Aljurf, Hila Mishan-Shamay, Fabio Ciceri, Mohamad Mohty, Shouval, R, Labopin, M, Bondi, O, Mishan Shamay, H, Shimoni, A, Ciceri, Fabio, Esteve, J, Giebel, S, Gorin, Nc, Schmid, C, Polge, E, Aljurf, M, Kroger, N, Craddock, C, Bacigalupo, A, Cornelissen, Jj, Baron, F, Unger, R, Nagler, A, Mohty, M., Universitat de Barcelona, and Hematology
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Male ,Cancer Research ,Time Factors ,Myeloid ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Kaplan-Meier Estimate ,Stem cells ,Hematopoietic stem cell transplantation ,computer.software_genre ,Machine Learning ,Postoperative Complications ,Risk Factors ,Data Mining ,Medicine ,Registries ,Acute leukemia ,Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation ,Middle Aged ,Precursor Cell Lymphoblastic Leukemia-Lymphoma ,Europe ,Leukemia, Myeloid, Acute ,Leukemia ,Treatment Outcome ,Myeloid leukemia ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Oncology ,Area Under Curve ,Cohort ,Disease Progression ,Female ,Cèl·lules mare ,Risk assessment ,Algorithm ,Algorithms ,Adult ,Leucèmia mieloide ,Machine learning ,Risk Assessment ,Disease-Free Survival ,Decision Support Techniques ,Predictive Value of Tests ,Hematopoesi ,Algorismes genètics ,Mortalitat ,Humans ,Transplantation, Homologous ,Mortality ,Retrospective Studies ,business.industry ,Decision Trees ,Reproducibility of Results ,Retrospective cohort study ,Genetic algorithms ,medicine.disease ,Hematopoiesis ,Transplantation ,Logistic Models ,ROC Curve ,Artificial intelligence ,business ,computer - Abstract
Purpose Allogeneic hematopoietic stem-cell transplantation (HSCT) is potentially curative for acute leukemia (AL), but carries considerable risk. Machine learning algorithms, which are part of the data mining (DM) approach, may serve for transplantation-related mortality risk prediction. Patients and Methods This work is a retrospective DM study on a cohort of 28,236 adult HSCT recipients from the AL registry of the European Group for Blood and Marrow Transplantation. The primary objective was prediction of overall mortality (OM) at 100 days after HSCT. Secondary objectives were estimation of nonrelapse mortality, leukemia-free survival, and overall survival at 2 years. Donor, recipient, and procedural characteristics were analyzed. The alternating decision tree machine learning algorithm was applied for model development on 70% of the data set and validated on the remaining data. Results OM prevalence at day 100 was 13.9% (n = 3,936). Of the 20 variables considered, 10 were selected by the model for OM prediction, and several interactions were discovered. By using a logistic transformation function, the crude score was transformed into individual probabilities for 100-day OM (range, 3% to 68%). The model's discrimination for the primary objective performed better than the European Group for Blood and Marrow Transplantation score (area under the receiver operating characteristics curve, 0.701 v 0.646; P < .001). Calibration was excellent. Scores assigned were also predictive of secondary objectives. Conclusion The alternating decision tree model provides a robust tool for risk evaluation of patients with AL before HSCT, and is available online ( http://bioinfo.lnx.biu.ac.il/∼bondi/web1.html ). It is presented as a continuous probabilistic score for the prediction of day 100 OM, extending prediction to 2 years. The DM method has proved useful for clinical prediction in HSCT.
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- 2015
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30. Predictors and implications of renal injury after CD19 chimeric antigen receptor T-cell therapy.
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Boardman AP, Gutgarts V, Flynn J, Devlin SM, Goldman A, Tomas AA, Fein JA, Slingerland JB, Parascondola A, Lin RJ, Scordo M, Dahi PB, Giralt S, Palomba ML, Salles G, Nath K, Walji M, Corona M, Park JH, Shah GL, Perales MA, Jaffer-Sathick I, and Shouval R
- Abstract
Chimeric Antigen Receptor (CAR) T cells targeting CD19 induce durable remissions in patients with relapsed or refractory non-Hodgkin lymphoma (NHL), but many patients experience treatmentrelated toxicity. Cytokine release syndrome and immune effector cell-associated neurologic syndrome are extensively characterized. However, limited data exist on the burden, predictors, and implications of acute kidney injury (AKI) after CAR T cell therapy. On initial screening of the FDA adverse event reporting system, we identified a disproportionately high rate of renal adverse events among nearly 6,000 CAR T adverse event reports, suggesting it is clinically important in this patient population. In a subsequent single-center analysis of 399 NHL patients treated with CD19 CAR T cells, we found a substantial burden of AKI after CAR T infusion (10% and 5% of any grade and grade ≥2 AKI) with pre-renal causes being predominant (72%). Evolution to chronic kidney disease was rare, however, 3 patients required hemodialysis. Importantly, patients experiencing cytokine release syndrome and/or neurotoxicity as well as those with low serum albumin and high inflammatory cytokines, including IL-6 and TNF-alpha, were more likely to develop AKI. While pre-CAR T renal dysfunction was not associated with adverse outcomes, patients developing post-CAR T AKI had lower overall survival compared to their counterparts. Our findings indicate that renal dysfunction is a common toxicity of CAR T cell therapy with meaningful prognostic impact. Notably, the link between systemic inflammation and renal dysfunction, suggests that readily available biomarkers may inform on renal injury risk after CAR T cell therapy.
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- 2024
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31. Development of ALL-Hematotox (ALL-HT): Predicting post CAR T-cell hematotoxicity in B-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia.
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Nair MS, Silbert SK, Rejeski K, Wilson KA, Lamble AJ, Valtis YK, Yates B, Morales Arana A, Shouval R, Curran KJ, Gardner RA, Shalabi H, Annesley C, Park JH, Subklewe M, and Shah NN
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Immune effector cell-associated hematotoxicity (ICAHT) is a major B-cell targeted chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T-cell related toxicity. While ICAHT incidence and severity is documented in large B-cell lymphoma (LBCL), mantle cell lymphoma (MCL), and multiple myeloma (MM), ICAHT has not been described in B-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (B-ALL). Similarly, the CAR-HEMATOTOX (CAR-HT) model, designed to predict severe prolonged neutropenia (>14 days of ANC <500/µl), has been validated in LBCL, MCL, and MM, but not in B-ALL. As B-ALL bone marrow (BM) infiltration can impact cytopenias, we sought to describe ICAHT and assess CAR-HT for predicting hematotoxicity in B-ALL. In a cohort of 156 children and young adults with relapsed/refractory B-ALL, the median duration of severe neutropenia (ANC <500/µl) was 13 days (95% CI 10-16), with 83 (53%) experiencing grade >3 ICAHT. Applying CAR-HT, nearly 90% were classified as high-risk, demonstrating limited discriminative power and prompting further development. Using the association identified between BM disease burden and post-infusion neutropenia (r=0.64, p<0.0001), we developed the ALL-Hematotox (ALL-HT) score which substitutes BM disease burden for ferritin in CAR-HT. The ALL-HT score associated with severe prolonged neutropenia (area under the curve=0.84, p<0.0001), and appropriately discriminated high-risk patients (47%) who had more cumulative days of neutropenia (26 vs 4 days, p<0.0001), fewer rates of complete response (88% vs 98%, p=0.03), and shorter median overall survival (9.8 vs 24 months, logrank p=0.0002). ALL-HT was also validated in two independent cohorts. The ALL-HT score refines a widely accepted predictive model of post-infusion hematotoxicity, applicable in B-ALL., (Copyright © 2024 American Society of Hematology.)
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- 2024
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32. Scalable log-ratio lasso regression for enhanced microbial feature selection with FLORAL.
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Fei T, Funnell T, Waters NR, Raj SS, Baichoo M, Sadeghi K, Dai A, Miltiadous O, Shouval R, Lv M, Peled JU, Ponce DM, Perales MA, Gönen M, and van den Brink MRM
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- Humans, Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation, Software, Computer Simulation, Microbiota genetics, Algorithms
- Abstract
Identifying predictive biomarkers of patient outcomes from high-throughput microbiome data is of high interest, while existing computational methods do not satisfactorily account for complex survival endpoints, longitudinal samples, and taxa-specific sequencing biases. We present FLORAL, an open-source tool to perform scalable log-ratio lasso regression and microbial feature selection for continuous, binary, time-to-event, and competing risk outcomes, with compatibility for longitudinal microbiome data as time-dependent covariates. The proposed method adapts the augmented Lagrangian algorithm for a zero-sum constraint optimization problem while enabling a two-stage screening process for enhanced false-positive control. In extensive simulation and real-data analyses, FLORAL achieved consistently better false-positive control compared to other lasso-based approaches and better sensitivity over popular differential abundance testing methods for datasets with smaller sample sizes. In a survival analysis of allogeneic hematopoietic cell transplant recipients, FLORAL demonstrated considerable improvement in microbial feature selection by utilizing longitudinal microbiome data over solely using baseline microbiome data., Competing Interests: Declaration of interests J.U.P. reports research funding, intellectual property fees, and travel reimbursement from Seres Therapeutics and consulting fees from DaVolterra, CSL Behring, Crestone, MaaT Pharma, Canaccord Genuity, and RA Capital. He serves on advisory boards of and holds equity in Postbiotics Plus Research and Prodigy Biosciences. He has filed intellectual property applications related to the microbiome (reference nos. 62/843,849, 62/977,908, and 15/756,845). D.M.P. has served as an advisory board member for Evive Biotechnology (Shanghai) Ltd. (formerly Generon [Shanghai] Corporation Ltd.); she served as advisory board member of or consultant to Sanofi, CareDx, Ceramedix, and Incyte; and she receives research funding from Takeda, Sanofi, and Incyte. M.-A.P. reports honoraria from Adicet, Allovir, Caribou Biosciences, Celgene, Bristol Myers Squibb, Equilium, Exevir, Incyte, Karyopharm, Kite/Gilead, Merck, Miltenyi Biotec, MorphoSys, Nektar Therapeutics, Novartis, Omeros, OrcaBio, Syncopation, VectivBio AG, and Vor Biopharma. He serves on data and safety monitoring boards for Cidara Therapeutics, Medigene, and Sellas Life Sciences and on the scientific advisory board of NexImmune. He has ownership interests in NexImmune and Omeros. He has received institutional research support for clinical trials from Incyte, Kite/Gilead, Miltenyi Biotec, Nektar Therapeutics, and Novartis. M.R.M.v.d.B. has received research support and stock options from Seres Therapeutics and stock options from Notch Therapeutics and Pluto Therapeutics; he has received royalties from Wolters Kluwer; he has consulted for, received honorarium from, or participated in advisory boards for Seres Therapeutics, Vor Biopharma, Rheos Medicines, Frazier Healthcare Partners, Nektar Therapeutics, Notch Therapeutics, Ceramedix, Lygenesis, Pluto Therapeutics, GlaxoSmithKline, Da Volterra, Thymofox, Garuda, Novartis (spouse), Synthekine (spouse), Beigene (spouse), and Kite (spouse); he has intellectual property licensing with Seres Therapeutics and Juno Therapeutics; and he holds a fiduciary role on the foundation board of DKMS (a nonprofit organization). MSKCC has institutional financial interests relative to Seres Therapeutics., (Copyright © 2024 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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33. Metabolic Tumor Volume Response after Bridging Therapy Determines Chimeric Antigen Receptor T-Cell Outcomes in Large B-Cell Lymphoma.
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Hubbeling H, Leithner D, Silverman EA, Flynn J, Devlin S, Shah G, Fregonese B, Wills B, Bedmutha A, Alarcon Tomas A, Parascondola A, Saldia A, Landego I, Hajj C, Boardman AP, Dahi PB, Ghosh A, Giralt S, Lin RJ, Park J, Scordo M, Salles G, Yahalom J, Palomba ML, Schöder H, Perales MA, Shouval R, and Imber BS
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- Humans, Male, Female, Middle Aged, Aged, Adult, Prognosis, Treatment Outcome, Antigens, CD19 immunology, Young Adult, Retrospective Studies, Lymphoma, Large B-Cell, Diffuse therapy, Lymphoma, Large B-Cell, Diffuse immunology, Lymphoma, Large B-Cell, Diffuse pathology, Immunotherapy, Adoptive methods, Tumor Burden, Receptors, Chimeric Antigen immunology, Receptors, Chimeric Antigen metabolism
- Abstract
Purpose: Greater disease burden is a well-established predictor of poorer outcomes following chimeric antigen receptor T-cell (CAR T) therapy. Although bridging therapy (BT) is widely used between leukapheresis and CAR T infusion, limited data have evaluated the impact of BT on CAR T outcomes. In this study, we hypothesized that the quantitative dynamics of radiomic cytoreduction during bridging are prognostic., Experimental Design: Patients with large B-cell lymphoma treated with CD19-CAR T from 2016 to 2022 were included in the study. Metabolic tumor volume (MTV) was determined for all patients on pre-leukapheresis PET and on post-BT/pre-infusion PET in those who received BT. Patients were stratified into "High" and "Low" disease burden using an MTV cutpoint of 65.4cc established by maximally selected log-rank statistic for progression-free survival (PFS)., Results: Of 191 patients treated with CAR T, 144 (75%) received BT. In the BT cohort, 56% had a reduction in MTV post-BT. On multivariate analysis, the MTV trajectory across the bridging period remained significantly associated with PFS (P < 0.001); however, notably, patients with improved MTV (High->Low) had equivalent PFS compared with those with initially and persistently low MTV (Low->Low; HR for High->Low MTV: 2.74; 95% confidence interval, 0.82-9.18). There was a reduction in any grade immune effector cell-associated neurotoxicity syndrome in the High->Low MTV cohort as compared with the High->High MTV cohort (13% vs. 41%; P = 0.05)., Conclusions: This is the first study to use radiomics to quantify disease burden pre- and post-BT in a large real-world large B-cell lymphoma cohort. We demonstrate that effective BT can enable initially high-disease burden patients to achieve post-CAR T outcomes comparable with low-disease burden patients., (©2024 American Association for Cancer Research.)
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- 2024
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34. Correction: Development and validation of an automated computational approach to grade immune effector cell-associated hematotoxicity.
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Liang EC, Rejeski K, Fei T, Albittar A, Huang JJ, Portuguese AJ, Wu Q, Raj S, Subklewe M, Shouval R, and Gauthier J
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- 2024
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35. Anti-CD19 chimeric antigen receptor T-cell therapy has less efficacy in Richter transformation than in <I>de novo</I> large B-cell lymphoma and transformed low-grade B-cell lymphoma.
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Benjamini O, Fried S, Shouval R, Flynn JR, Beyar-Katz O, Leslie LA, Zucherman T, Yerushalmi R, Shem-Tov N, Palomba ML, Danylesko I, Sdayoor I, Malka H, Itzhaki O, Suh H, Devlin SM, Marcus R, Dahi PB, Jacoby E, Shah GL, Sauter CS, Ip A, Perales MA, Nagler A, Shimoni A, Scordo M, and Avigdor A
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- Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Female, Aged, Retrospective Studies, Adult, Treatment Outcome, Aged, 80 and over, Leukemia, Lymphocytic, Chronic, B-Cell therapy, Leukemia, Lymphocytic, Chronic, B-Cell mortality, Leukemia, Lymphocytic, Chronic, B-Cell immunology, Neoplasm Grading, Immunotherapy, Adoptive adverse effects, Immunotherapy, Adoptive methods, Lymphoma, Large B-Cell, Diffuse therapy, Lymphoma, Large B-Cell, Diffuse immunology, Lymphoma, Large B-Cell, Diffuse mortality, Antigens, CD19 immunology, Receptors, Chimeric Antigen immunology
- Abstract
The activity of anti-CD19 chimerci antigen receptor (CAR) T-cell therapy in chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) with Richter's transformation (RT) to aggressive large B-cell lymphoma (LBCL) is largely unknown. In a multicenter retrospective study, we report the safety and efficacy of CAR T-cell therapy in patients with RT (N=30) compared to patients with aggressive B-cell lymphoma (N=283) and patients with transformed indolent non-Hodgkin lymphoma (iNHL) (N=141) between April 2016 and January 2023. Two-thirds of patients received prior therapy for CLL before RT and 89% of them received B-cell receptor and B-cell lymphoma 2 inhibitors. Toxicities of CAR T-cell therapy in RT were similar to other lymphomas, with no fatalities related to cytokine release syndrome or immune effector-cell associated neurotoxicity synderome. The 100-day overall response rate and complete response rates in patients with RT were 57% and 47%, respectively. With a median follow-up of 19 months, the median overall survival (OS) was 9.9 months in patients with RT compared to 18 months in de novo LBCL and not reached in patients with transformed iNHL. The OS at 12 months was 45% in patients with RT compared with 62% and 75% in patients with de novo LBCL and transformed iNHL, respectively. In a multivariate analysis, worse OS was associated with RT histology, elevated lactate dehydrogenase, and more prior lines of therapy. CAR T-cell therapy can salvage a proportion of patients with CLL and RT exposed to prior targeted agents; however, efficacy in RT is inferior compared to de novo LBCL and transformed iNHL.
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- 2024
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36. Cancer cachexia and weight loss prior to CAR T-cell therapy for lymphoma are independently associated with poor outcomes.
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Valtis YK, Devlin SM, Shouval R, Rejeski K, Corona M, Luna De Abia A, Rivas-Delgado A, Luttwak E, Cassanello G, Landego I Dr, Schöder H, Bedmutha A, Boardman AP, Shah GL, Scordo M, Perales MA, Salles GA, Palomba ML, Shah UA, and Park JH
- Abstract
CAR T-cell therapy has transformed the care of lymphoma, yet many patients relapse. Several prognostic markers have been associated with CAR T cell outcomes, such as tumor burden, response to bridging chemotherapy, and laboratory parameters at the time of lymphodepletion or infusion. The effect of cancer cachexia and weight loss prior to CAR T cells on toxicity and outcomes is not well understood. Here, we present a retrospective single institution cohort study of 259 patients with lymphoma treated with CAR T-cells between 2017 and 2023. We observed that patients with a >5% decrease in their body mass index (BMI) in the 3 months preceding CAR T treatment (weight loss group; all meeting one of the commonly accepted definitions of cancer cachexia) had higher disease burden and inflammatory parameters (CRP, ferritin, IL6, TNFa) at time of lymphodepletion and CAR T-cell infusion. Patients with weight loss experienced higher rates of grade 3+ neurotoxicity and early hematotoxicity but those effects were not seen upon multivariable adjustment. However, in both univariate and multivariable analysis, patients with weight loss had worse response rates, overall survival, and event-free survival, indicating that weight loss is an independent poor prognostic factor. Our data suggest that weight loss in the 3 months preceding CAR T-cell therapy represents a worrisome "alarm signal" and potentially modifiable factor alongside tumor burden and inflammation and warrants further investigation in patients treated with CAR T therapy., (Copyright © 2024 American Society of Hematology.)
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- 2024
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37. Shift from Widespread to Tailored Antifungal Prophylaxis in Lymphoma Patients Treated with CD19 CAR T Cell Therapy: Results from a Large Retrospective Cohort.
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Melica G, Luna de Abia A, Shah GL, Devlin S, Corona M, Fein J, Dahi PB, Giralt SA, Lin RJ, Palomba ML, Parascondola A, Park J, Salles G, Saldia A, Scordo M, Shouval R, Perales MA, and Seo SK
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Patients undergoing CD19 chimeric antigen receptor (CAR)-T cell therapy exhibit multiple immune deficits that may increase their susceptibility to infections. Invasive fungal infections (IFIs) are life-threatening events in the setting of hematologic diseases. However, there is ongoing debate regarding the optimal role and duration of antifungal prophylaxis in this specific patient population. The objective of this study was to provide a comprehensive overview of the evolution of IFI prophylactic strategies over time and to assess IFI incidence rates in a cohort of patients with relapsed or refractory (R/R) lymphoma treated with CAR-T cell therapy. A single-center retrospective study was conducted on a cohort of patients with R/R B cell lymphoma treated with CD19 CAR-T cell therapy between April 2016 and March 2023. Group A (April 2016-August 2020) consisted of patients primarily treated with fluconazole, irrespective of their individual IFI risk profile. In Group B (September 2020-March 2023) antifungal prophylaxis was recommended only for high-risk patients. Overall, 330 patients were included. Antifungal prophylaxis was prescribed to 119/142 (84%) patients in Group A and 58/188 (31%) in Group B (P < .001). Anti-mold azoles were prescribed to 8 (5.6%) patients in Group A and 21 (11.2%) patients in Group B. In Group A, 42 (29%) patients were switched to another antifungal, 9 (21%) because of toxicity, with 6 cases of transaminitis and 3 cases of prolonged QTc. In Group B, 21 (11.2%) patients were switched to the antifungal drug, mainly from fluconazole or micafungin to a mold-active agent following revised guidelines. No difference was found in liver toxicity between the two groups at infusion, day 10, and day 30. No significant differences were observed between the groups. IFIs following CAR-T cell therapy were rare, with 1 case of cryptococcal meningoencephalitis in group A (.7%) and 1 case of invasive aspergillosis in Group B (.5%), both occurring in patients on micafungin prophylaxis. In this large single-center cohort of patients with R/R lymphoma treated with CAR-T cells, we show that individualized prophylaxis, alongside careful management of CAR-T cell-related toxicities such as CRS, was associated with a very low IFI rate, avoiding the risk of unnecessary toxicities, drug-drug interactions, and high costs., (Copyright © 2024 The American Society for Transplantation and Cellular Therapy. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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38. CD19-directed CART therapy for T-cell/histiocyte-rich large B-cell lymphoma.
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Pophali PA, Fein JA, Ahn KW, Allbee-Johnson M, Ahmed N, Awan FT, Farhan S, Grover NS, Hilal T, Iqbal M, Maakaron J, Modi D, Nasrollahi E, Schachter LG, Sauter C, Hamadani M, Herrera A, Shouval R, and Shadman M
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- Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Female, Adult, Aged, T-Lymphocytes immunology, T-Lymphocytes metabolism, Histiocytes pathology, Treatment Outcome, Receptors, Chimeric Antigen therapeutic use, Young Adult, Antigens, CD19 immunology, Antigens, CD19 therapeutic use, Lymphoma, Large B-Cell, Diffuse therapy, Lymphoma, Large B-Cell, Diffuse drug therapy, Lymphoma, Large B-Cell, Diffuse mortality, Immunotherapy, Adoptive adverse effects, Immunotherapy, Adoptive methods
- Abstract
Abstract: T-cell/histiocyte-rich large B-cell lymphoma (THRLBCL) is a rare histologic variant of LBCL. Limited data regarding CD19-directed chimeric antigen receptor T-cell (CART) therapy in relapsed/refractory (R/R) THRLBCL suggest poor efficacy. We investigated CART outcomes for R/R THRLBCL through the Center for International Blood and Marrow Transplant Research registry. A total of 58 adult patients with R/R THRLBCL who received commercial CD19-CART therapy between 2018 and 2022 were identified. Most patients (67%) had early relapse of disease (45% primary refractory) with a median of 3 (range, 1-7) prior therapies and were treated with axicabtagene ciloleucel (69%). At median follow-up of 23 months after CART therapy, 2-year overall and progression-free survival were 42% (95% confidence interval [CI], 27-57) and 29% (95% CI, 17-43), respectively. In univariable analysis, poor performance status before CART therapy was associated with higher mortality (hazard ratio, 2.35; 95%CI, 1.02-5.5). The 2-year cumulative incidences of relapse/progression and nonrelapse mortality were 69% and 2%, respectively. Grade ≥3 cytokine release syndrome and immune effector cell-associated neurologic syndrome occurred in 7% and 15% of patients, respectively. In this largest analysis of CD19-CART therapy for R/R THRLBCL, ∼30% of patients were alive and progression free 2 years after CART therapy. Despite a high incidence of progression (69% at 2 years), these results suggest a subset of patients with R/R THRLBCL may have durable responses with CARTs., (© 2024 by The American Society of Hematology. Licensed under Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0), permitting only noncommercial, nonderivative use with attribution. All other rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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39. Second Primary Malignancies after CAR T-Cell Therapy: A Systematic Review and Meta-analysis of 5,517 Lymphoma and Myeloma Patients.
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Tix T, Alhomoud M, Shouval R, Cliff ERS, Perales MA, Cordas Dos Santos DM, and Rejeski K
- Subjects
- Humans, Receptors, Chimeric Antigen immunology, Immunotherapy, Adoptive adverse effects, Immunotherapy, Adoptive methods, Lymphoma immunology, Lymphoma therapy, Multiple Myeloma therapy, Multiple Myeloma immunology, Neoplasms, Second Primary epidemiology, Neoplasms, Second Primary etiology
- Abstract
Purpose: Chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T-cell therapy is a potent immunotherapy for hematologic malignancies, but patients can develop long-term adverse events, including second primary malignancies (SPM) that impact morbidity and mortality. To delineate the frequency and subtypes of SPMs following CAR-T in lymphoma and myeloma, we performed a systematic review and meta-analysis., Experimental Design: A literature search was conducted in the MEDLINE, Embase, and Cochrane CENTRAL databases. Following the extraction of SPM cases and assignment of malignant origin, we analyzed SPM point estimates using random effects models., Results: We identified 326 SPMs across 5,517 patients from 18 clinical trials and 7 real-world studies. With a median follow-up of 21.7 months, the overall SPM point estimate was 6.0% (95% confidence interval, 4.8%-7.4%). SPM estimates were associated with treatment setting (clinical trials > real-world studies), duration of follow-up, and number of prior treatment lines, which were each confirmed as independent study-level risk factors of SPM in a meta-regression model. A subgroup meta-analysis of the four trials that randomized CAR-T versus standard-of-care revealed a similar risk of SPM with either treatment strategy (P = 0.92). In a distribution analysis of SPM subtypes, hematologic malignancies were the most common entity (37%), followed by solid tumors (27%) and non-melanoma skin cancers (16%). T-cell malignancies represented a small minority of events (1.5%). We noted disease- and product-specific variations in SPM distribution., Conclusions: These data raise awareness of SPM as a clinically relevant long-term adverse event in patients receiving CAR T-cell therapy. However, our findings do not indicate that SPM frequency is higher with CAR-T versus previous standard-of-care strategies., (©2024 American Association for Cancer Research.)
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- 2024
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40. CNS bridging radiotherapy achieves rapid cytoreduction before CAR T-cell therapy for aggressive B-cell lymphomas.
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Cederquist GY, Schefflein J, Devlin SM, Shah GL, Shouval R, Hubbeling H, Tringale K, Alarcon Tomas A, Fregonese B, Hajj C, Boardman A, Luna De Abia A, Corona M, Cassanello G, Dahi PB, Lin RJ, Ghione P, Salles G, Perales MA, Palomba ML, Falchi L, Scordo M, Grommes C, Yahalom J, and Imber BS
- Subjects
- Humans, Middle Aged, Male, Female, Aged, Adult, Treatment Outcome, Receptors, Chimeric Antigen therapeutic use, Combined Modality Therapy, Immunotherapy, Adoptive methods, Immunotherapy, Adoptive adverse effects, Lymphoma, B-Cell therapy, Lymphoma, B-Cell radiotherapy, Central Nervous System Neoplasms therapy, Central Nervous System Neoplasms radiotherapy
- Abstract
Abstract: Chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T-cell therapy (CART) for central nervous system lymphoma (CNSL) is a promising strategy, yet responses are frequently not durable. Bridging radiotherapy (BRT) is used for extracranial lymphoma in which it can improve CART outcomes through cytoreduction of high-risk lesions. We hypothesized that BRT would achieve similar, significant cytoreduction before CART for CNSL (CNS-BRT). We identified patients with CNSL with non-Hodgkin B-cell lymphoma who received CNS-BRT before commercial CART. Cytoreduction from CNS-BRT was calculated as change in lesion size before CART. Twelve patients received CNS-BRT, and the median follow-up among survivors is 11.8 months (interquartile range, 8.5-21.9). Ten patients had CNSL (9 secondary, 1 primary) and 2 patients had epidural disease (evaluable for toxicity). All 10 patients with CNSL had progressive disease at the time of CNS-BRT. Of 12 patients, 1 experienced grade ≥3 cytokine release syndrome, and 3 of 12 patients experienced grade ≥3 immune effector cell-associated neurotoxicity syndrome. CNS-BRT achieved a 74.0% (95% confidence interval, 62.0-86.0) mean reduction in lesion size from baseline (P = .014) at a median of 12 days from BRT completion and before CART infusion. Best CNS response included 8 complete responses, 1 partial response, and 1 progressive disease. Three patients experienced CNS relapse outside the BRT field. Preliminary data suggest CNS-BRT achieves rapid cytoreduction and is associated with a favorable CNS response and safety profile. These data support further study of BRT as a bridging modality for CNSL CART., (© 2024 by The American Society of Hematology. Licensed under Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0), permitting only noncommercial, nonderivative use with attribution. All other rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2024
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41. CAF-induced physical constraints controlling T cell state and localization in solid tumours.
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Arpinati L, Carradori G, and Scherz-Shouval R
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- Humans, Animals, Signal Transduction, Tumor Microenvironment immunology, Neoplasms immunology, Neoplasms pathology, Cancer-Associated Fibroblasts immunology, Cancer-Associated Fibroblasts metabolism, Cancer-Associated Fibroblasts pathology, Extracellular Matrix metabolism, Extracellular Matrix immunology, T-Lymphocytes immunology
- Abstract
Solid tumours comprise cancer cells that engage in continuous interactions with non-malignant cells and with acellular components, forming the tumour microenvironment (TME). The TME has crucial and diverse roles in tumour progression and metastasis, and substantial efforts have been dedicated into understanding the functions of different cell types within the TME. These efforts highlighted the importance of non-cell-autonomous signalling in cancer, mediating interactions between the cancer cells, the immune microenvironment and the non-immune stroma. Much of this non-cell-autonomous signalling is mediated through acellular components of the TME, known as the extracellular matrix (ECM), and controlled by the cells that secrete and remodel the ECM - the cancer-associated fibroblasts (CAFs). In this Review, we delve into the complex crosstalk among cancer cells, CAFs and immune cells, highlighting the effects of CAF-induced ECM remodelling on T cell functions and offering insights into the potential of targeting ECM components to improve cancer therapies., (© 2024. Springer Nature Limited.)
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- 2024
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42. HSF1 renders NK cells too stressed to respond.
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Gruper Y, Ben-Shmuel A, and Scherz-Shouval R
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- 2024
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43. Subsequent Malignancies After CD19-Targeted Chimeric Antigen Receptor T Cells in Patients With Lymphoma.
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Lorenc R, Shouval R, Flynn JR, Devlin SM, Saldia A, De Abia AL, De Lapuerta MC, Tomas AA, Cassanello G, Leslie LA, Rejeski K, Lin RJ, Scordo M, Shah GL, Palomba ML, Salles G, Park J, Giralt SA, Perales MA, Ip A, and Dahi PB
- Subjects
- Humans, Male, Female, Middle Aged, Aged, Adult, Retrospective Studies, Neoplasms, Second Primary immunology, Neoplasms, Second Primary epidemiology, Young Adult, Aged, 80 and over, Immunotherapy, Adoptive adverse effects, Receptors, Chimeric Antigen immunology, Antigens, CD19 immunology
- Abstract
Chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T cells are an established treatment for B cell non-Hodgkin lymphomas (B-NHL). With the remarkable success in improving survival, understanding the late effects of CAR T cell therapy is becoming more relevant. The aim of this study is to determine the incidence of subsequent malignancies in adult patients with B-NHL. We retrospectively studied 355 patients from 2 different medical centers treated with four different CAR T cell products from 2016 to 2022. The overall cumulative incidence for subsequent malignancies at 36 months was 14% (95% CI: 9.2%, 19%). Subsequent malignancies were grouped into 3 primary categories: solid tumor, hematologic malignancy, and dermatologic malignancy with cumulative incidences at 36 months of 6.1% (95% CI: 3.1%-10%), 4.5% (95% CI: 2.1%-8.1%) and 4.2% (95% CI: 2.1%-7.5%) respectively. Notably, no cases of T cell malignancies were observed. In univariable analysis, increasing age was associated with higher risk for subsequent malignancy. While the overall benefits of CAR T products continue to outweigh their potential risks, more studies and longer follow ups are needed to further demonstrate the risks, patterns, and molecular pathways that lead to the development of subsequent malignancies., (Copyright © 2024 The American Society for Transplantation and Cellular Therapy. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2024
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44. Dermatologic Adverse Events Associated With Chimeric Antigen Receptor T-Cell Therapy: A Pharmacovigilance Analysis of the FDA Reporting System.
- Author
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Storgard R, Dusza S, Shouval R, Scordo M, and Markova A
- Subjects
- Humans, United States epidemiology, Male, Female, Middle Aged, Adult, Adolescent, Aged, Receptors, Chimeric Antigen, Receptors, Antigen, T-Cell therapeutic use, Young Adult, Skin Diseases chemically induced, Skin Diseases therapy, Lymphoma, Large B-Cell, Diffuse drug therapy, Biological Products adverse effects, Pharmacovigilance, Immunotherapy, Adoptive adverse effects, United States Food and Drug Administration, Adverse Drug Reaction Reporting Systems statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
Chimeric antigen receptor T-cell (CAR-T) therapy, including axicabtagene ciloleucel (axi-cel) and tisagenlecleucel (tisa-cel), has demonstrated significant efficacy in treating refractory or relapsed diffuse large B-cell lymphoma and B-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia. Though adverse events such as cytokine release syndrome (CRS) and immune effector cell-associated neurotoxicity syndrome (ICANS) are well characterized, the dermatologic adverse event (DAE) profile is less thoroughly described. This study aims to provide the first comprehensive analysis of DAEs associated with axi-cel and tisa-cel using real-world data from the FDA Adverse Event Reporting System (FAERS) database. FAERS database reports citing axi-cel or tisa-cel in patients aged 16 years or older were included, excluding duplicate reports and off-label indications. Disproportionality analysis by reporting odds ratio (ROR) was utilized to detect increased reporting of drug-adverse event combinations. Of the 11,256,845 reports in the FAERS database, 5559 identified CAR-T therapy as the primary suspected drug. After exclusions, 3,666 reports were analyzed (2,168 for axi-cel and 1,498 for tisa-cel). Among these, 2.7% of axi-cel and 5.1% of tisa-cel cases reported DAEs. There was a statistically significant increased reporting of 2 DAE groups associated with CAR-T therapy: severe cutaneous eruptions (ROR 5.18, 95% CI 1.29, 20.76) and vascular cutaneous (ROR 2.91, 95% CI 1.51, 5.60). The median time to DAE onset was 3 days after CAR T-cell infusion. Death was a reported outcome in 11.9% and 13.0% of axi-cel and tisa-cel DAE cases, respectively, and in 50% and 25% of severe cutaneous eruptions and vascular cutaneous cases, respectively. This study reveals a significantly increased reporting rate of severe cutaneous eruptions and vascular cutaneous DAEs associated with CAR-T therapy, with both event groups associated with high mortality. These results emphasize the importance of monitoring dermatologic toxicities in clinical practice to ensure timely identification and management of potentially severe adverse events., (Copyright © 2024 The American Society for Transplantation and Cellular Therapy. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2024
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45. Point of care CD19 chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T-cells for relapsed/refractory acute myeloid leukemia (AML) with aberrant CD19 antigen expression.
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Danylesko I, Shem-Tov N, Yerushalmi R, Jacoby E, Toren A, Shouval R, Itzhaki O, Avigdor A, Shimoni A, and Nagler A
- Abstract
Relapsed/refractory (r/r) acute myeloid leukemia (AML) is associated with poor prognosis. CD19 is a B-cell marker, is aberrantly expressed in AML, mostly with t(8; 21)(q22; q22.1). Here we report the results of a phase 2 study giving point of care produced CD19 CAR T- cells for r/r AML with aberrant expression of CD19 (NCT04257175). Lymphodepletion included fludarabine and cyclophosphamide The response was evaluated by bone marrow (BM) aspiration on day 28. Six patients (5 adults and 1 child) were included. Median number of previous chemotherapy lines was 4 (range, 3-8) and four patients received CAR T-cells 8-18 months post allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (allo-HSCT). Cytokine release syndrome (CRS) of any grade occurred in all patients, and 1 patient had grade 3 CRS. Immune effector cell-associated neurotoxicity syndrome (ICANS) occurred in 2 patients at low grades. Tocilizumab was administered to 2 patients and corticosteroids to 3 patients. Four patients achieved a complete remission (CR), while 2/6 progressed (PD). Three patients (2 with CR and 1 with PD) underwent allo-HSCT (it was the second transplant in 2) 2-5 months post CAR T-cells infusion. The median duration of response in patients achieving CR was 8.5 (range; 3-14) months. However, all patients eventually died within 5 (1-18) months. In conclusion, CD19 CAR T- cell treatment for AML is feasible and safe. However, the response is short and should be followed by allo-HSCT. Hopefully, future long term results will be improved by combining the CAR T- cell therapy with the emerging novel effective anti-leukemic compounds., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest The authors declare that they have no relevant conflict of interest and no competing financial interests., (Copyright © 2024. Published by Elsevier Masson SAS.)
- Published
- 2024
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46. Microbial metabolite-guided CAR T cell engineering enhances anti-tumor immunity via epigenetic-metabolic crosstalk.
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Staudt S, Nikolka F, Perl M, Franz J, Leblay N, Yuan XK, Warmuth L, Fantes MA, Skorupskaitė A, Fei T, Bromberg M, Martin-Uriz PS, Rodriguez-Madoz JR, Ziegler-Martin K, Gholam NA, Benz P, Tran PH, Freitag F, Riester Z, Stein-Thoeringer C, Schmitt M, Kleigrewe K, Weber J, Mangold K, Einsele H, Prosper F, Ellmeier W, Busch D, Visekruna A, Slingerland J, Shouval R, Hiller K, van den Brink M, Pausch P, Neri P, Hudecek M, Poeck H, and Luu M
- Abstract
Emerging data have highlighted a correlation between microbiome composition and cancer immunotherapy outcome. While commensal bacteria and their metabolites are known to modulate the host environment, contradictory effects and a lack of mechanistic understanding impede the translation of microbiome-based therapies into the clinic. In this study, we demonstrate that abundance of the commensal metabolite pentanoate is predictive for survival of chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T cell patients in two independent cohorts. Its implementation in the CAR T cell manufacturing workflow overcomes solid tumor microenvironments in immunocompetent cancer models by hijacking the epigenetic-metabolic crosstalk, reducing exhaustion and promoting naive-like differentiation. While synergy of clinically relevant drugs mimicked the phenotype of pentanoate-engineered CAR T cells in vitro , in vivo challenge showed inferior tumor control. Metabolic tracing of
13 C-pentanoate revealed citrate generation in the TCA cycle via the acetyl- and succinyl-CoA entry points as a unique feature of the C5 aliphatic chain. Inhibition of the ATP-citrate lyase, which links metabolic output and histone acetylation, led to accumulation of pentanoate-derived citrate from the succinyl-CoA route and decreased functionality of SCFA-engineered CAR T cells. Our data demonstrate that microbial metabolites are incorporated as epigenetic imprints and implementation into CAR T cell production might serve as embodiment of the microbiome-host axis benefits for clinical applications., Competing Interests: ML, MH and AV are listed as inventors on patent application WO2021/058811A1. MH is listed as an inventor on patent applications and granted patents related to CAR-T technologies that have been filed by the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center, Seattle, WA and by the University of Würzburg, Würzburg, Germany. MH is a co-founder and equity owner of T-CURX GmbH, Würzburg, Germany. MH received honoraria from Celgene/BMS, Janssen, Kite/Gilead. MvdB has received research support and stock options from Seres Therapeutics and stock options from Notch Therapeutics and Pluto Therapeutics; he has received royalties from Wolters Kluwer; has consulted, received honorarium from or participated in advisory boards for Seres Therapeutics, Rheos Medicines, Ceramedix, Pluto Therapeutics, Thymofox, Garuda, Novartis (Spouse), Synthekine (Spouse), Beigene (Spouse), Kite (Spouse); he has IP Licensing with Seres Therapeutics and Juno Therapeutics; and holds a fiduciary role on the Foundation Board of DKMS (a nonprofit organization). PN received honoraria from BMS, Janssen, Sanofi and Pfizer as a consultant/advisory board member. MAF received honoraria from Novartis and Sanofi and travel grants from Sanofi. HP is a consultant for Gilead, Abbvie, Pfizer, Novartis, Servier, and Bristol Myers-Squibb. The remaining authors declare no financial conflict of interest.- Published
- 2024
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47. A systematic review and meta-analysis of nonrelapse mortality after CAR T cell therapy.
- Author
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Cordas Dos Santos DM, Tix T, Shouval R, Gafter-Gvili A, Alberge JB, Cliff ERS, Theurich S, von Bergwelt-Baildon M, Ghobrial IM, Subklewe M, Perales MA, and Rejeski K
- Subjects
- Humans, Biological Products administration & dosage, Biological Products adverse effects, Receptors, Chimeric Antigen immunology, Immunotherapy, Adoptive adverse effects, Immunotherapy, Adoptive methods, Lymphoma therapy, Lymphoma immunology, Lymphoma mortality, Multiple Myeloma therapy, Multiple Myeloma immunology, Multiple Myeloma mortality
- Abstract
Although chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T cell therapy represents a transformative immunotherapy, it is also associated with distinct toxicities that contribute to morbidity and mortality. In this systematic review and meta-analysis, we searched MEDLINE, Embase and CINAHL (Cochrane) for reports of nonrelapse mortality (NRM) after CAR T cell therapy in lymphoma and multiple myeloma up to March 2024. After extraction of causes and numbers of death, we analyzed NRM point estimates using random-effect models. We identified 7,604 patients across 18 clinical trials and 28 real-world studies. NRM point estimates varied across disease entities and were highest in patients with mantle-cell lymphoma (10.6%), followed by multiple myeloma (8.0%), large B cell lymphoma (6.1%) and indolent lymphoma (5.7%). Entity-specific meta-regression models for large B cell lymphoma and multiple myeloma revealed that axicabtagene ciloleucel and ciltacabtagene autoleucel were independently associated with increased NRM point estimates, respectively. Of 574 reported nonrelapse deaths, over half were attributed to infections (50.9%), followed by other malignancies (7.8%) and cardiovascular/respiratory events (7.3%). Conversely, the CAR T cell-specific side effects, immune effector cell-associated neurotoxicity syndrome/neurotoxicity, cytokine release syndrome and hemophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis, represented only a minority of nonrelapse deaths (cumulatively 11.5%). Our findings underline the critical importance of infectious complications after CAR T cell therapy and support the comprehensive reporting of NRM, including specific causes and long-term outcomes., (© 2024. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Nature America, Inc.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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48. Atrial arrhythmias following CAR-chimeric antigen receptor T-cell therapy: Incidence, risk factors and biomarker profile.
- Author
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Shouval R, Goldman A, Flynn JR, El-Moghraby A, Rehman M, Devlin SM, Corona M, Landego I, Lin RJ, Scordo M, Raj SS, Giralt SA, Palomba ML, Dahi PB, Walji M, Salles G, Nath K, Geyer MB, Park JH, Fein JA, Kosmidou I, Shah GL, Liu JE, Perales MA, and Mahmood SS
- Subjects
- Humans, Male, Female, Middle Aged, Risk Factors, Incidence, Aged, Retrospective Studies, Adult, Biomarkers blood, Lymphoma, Non-Hodgkin therapy, Lymphoma, Non-Hodgkin epidemiology, Lymphoma, Non-Hodgkin immunology, Receptors, Chimeric Antigen, Antigens, CD19 immunology, Immunotherapy, Adoptive adverse effects, Arrhythmias, Cardiac etiology, Arrhythmias, Cardiac therapy
- Abstract
Recent reports have raised concerns about the association of chimeric antigen receptor T cell (CAR-T) with non-negligible cardiotoxicity, particularly atrial arrhythmias. First, we conducted a pharmacovigilance study to assess the reporting of atrial arrhythmias following CD19-directed CAR-T. Subsequently, to determine the incidence, risk factors and outcomes of atrial arrhythmias post-CAR-T, we compiled a retrospective single-centre cohort of non-Hodgkin lymphoma patients. Only commercial CAR-T products were considered. Atrial arrhythmias were nearly fourfold more likely to be reported after CAR-T therapy compared to all other cancer patients in the FAERS (adjusted ROR = 3.76 [95% CI 2.67-5.29]). Of the 236 patients in our institutional cohort, 23 (10%) developed atrial arrhythmias post-CAR-T, including 12 de novo arrhythmias, with most (83%) requiring medical intervention. Atrial arrhythmias frequently co-occurred with cytokine release syndrome and were associated with higher post-CAR-T infusion peak levels of IL-10, TNF-alpha and LDH, and lower trough levels of fibrinogen. In a multivariable analysis, risk factors for atrial arrhythmia were history of atrial arrhythmia (OR = 6.80 [2.39-19.6]) and using CAR-T product with a CD28-costimulatory domain (OR = 5.17 [1.72-18.6]). Atrial arrhythmias following CD19-CAR-T therapy are prevalent and associated with elevated inflammatory biomarkers, a history of atrial arrhythmia and the use of a CAR-T product with a CD28 costimulatory domain., (© 2024 British Society for Haematology and John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
- Published
- 2024
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49. Multi-parametric atlas of the pre-metastatic liver for prediction of metastatic outcome in early-stage pancreatic cancer.
- Author
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Bojmar L, Zambirinis CP, Hernandez JM, Chakraborty J, Shaashua L, Kim J, Johnson KE, Hanna S, Askan G, Burman J, Ravichandran H, Zheng J, Jolissaint JS, Srouji R, Song Y, Choubey A, Kim HS, Cioffi M, van Beek E, Sigel C, Jessurun J, Velasco Riestra P, Blomstrand H, Jönsson C, Jönsson A, Lauritzen P, Buehring W, Ararso Y, Hernandez D, Vinagolu-Baur JP, Friedman M, Glidden C, Firmenich L, Lieberman G, Mejia DL, Nasar N, Mutvei AP, Paul DM, Bram Y, Costa-Silva B, Basturk O, Boudreau N, Zhang H, Matei IR, Hoshino A, Kelsen D, Sagi I, Scherz A, Scherz-Shouval R, Yarden Y, Oren M, Egeblad M, Lewis JS, Keshari K, Grandgenett PM, Hollingsworth MA, Rajasekhar VK, Healey JH, Björnsson B, Simeone DM, Tuveson DA, Iacobuzio-Donahue CA, Bromberg J, Vincent CT, O'Reilly EM, DeMatteo RP, Balachandran VP, D'Angelica MI, Kingham TP, Allen PJ, Simpson AL, Elemento O, Sandström P, Schwartz RE, Jarnagin WR, and Lyden D
- Subjects
- Humans, Male, Female, Middle Aged, Aged, Biopsy, Neoplasm Staging, Pancreatectomy, Extracellular Traps metabolism, Prognosis, Pancreatic Neoplasms pathology, Pancreatic Neoplasms genetics, Pancreatic Neoplasms surgery, Liver Neoplasms secondary, Liver Neoplasms pathology, Liver Neoplasms genetics, Liver pathology, Liver metabolism
- Abstract
Metastasis occurs frequently after resection of pancreatic cancer (PaC). In this study, we hypothesized that multi-parametric analysis of pre-metastatic liver biopsies would classify patients according to their metastatic risk, timing and organ site. Liver biopsies obtained during pancreatectomy from 49 patients with localized PaC and 19 control patients with non-cancerous pancreatic lesions were analyzed, combining metabolomic, tissue and single-cell transcriptomics and multiplex imaging approaches. Patients were followed prospectively (median 3 years) and classified into four recurrence groups; early (<6 months after resection) or late (>6 months after resection) liver metastasis (LiM); extrahepatic metastasis (EHM); and disease-free survivors (no evidence of disease (NED)). Overall, PaC livers exhibited signs of augmented inflammation compared to controls. Enrichment of neutrophil extracellular traps (NETs), Ki-67 upregulation and decreased liver creatine significantly distinguished those with future metastasis from NED. Patients with future LiM were characterized by scant T cell lobular infiltration, less steatosis and higher levels of citrullinated H3 compared to patients who developed EHM, who had overexpression of interferon target genes (MX1 and NR1D1) and an increase of CD11B
+ natural killer (NK) cells. Upregulation of sortilin-1 and prominent NETs, together with the lack of T cells and a reduction in CD11B+ NK cells, differentiated patients with early-onset LiM from those with late-onset LiM. Liver profiles of NED closely resembled those of controls. Using the above parameters, a machine-learning-based model was developed that successfully predicted the metastatic outcome at the time of surgery with 78% accuracy. Therefore, multi-parametric profiling of liver biopsies at the time of PaC diagnosis may determine metastatic risk and organotropism and guide clinical stratification for optimal treatment selection., (© 2024. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Nature America, Inc.)- Published
- 2024
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50. Development and validation of an automated computational approach to grade immune effector cell-associated hematotoxicity.
- Author
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Liang EC, Rejeski K, Fei T, Albittar A, Huang JJ, Portuguese AJ, Wu Q, Raj S, Subklewe M, Shouval R, and Gauthier J
- Subjects
- Humans, Immunotherapy, Adoptive methods, Immunotherapy, Adoptive adverse effects
- Abstract
Hematologic toxicity frequently complicates chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T-cell therapy, resulting in significant morbidity and mortality. In an effort to standardize reporting, the European Hematology Association (EHA) and European Society of Blood and Marrow Transplantation (EBMT) devised the immune effector cell-associated hematotoxicity (ICAHT) grading system, distinguishing between early (day 0-30) and late (after day +30) events based on neutropenia depth and duration. However, manual implementation of ICAHT grading criteria is time-consuming and susceptible to subjectivity and error. To address these challenges, we introduce a novel computational approach, utilizing the R programming language, to automate early and late ICAHT grading. Given the complexities of early ICAHT grading, we benchmarked our approach both manually and computationally in two independent cohorts totaling 1251 patients. Our computational approach offers significant implications by streamlining grading processes, reducing manual time and effort, and promoting standardization across varied clinical settings. We provide this tool to the scientific community alongside a comprehensive implementation guide, fostering its widespread adoption and enhancing reporting consistency for ICAHT., (© 2024. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Nature Limited.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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