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New Hope for Baby Boomers with Leukemia and
Lymphoma
Newswise, February 18, 2011 — MAYWOOD, Ill.
-- As the first baby boomers turn 65, Loyola
University Hospital has begun offering stem
cell transplants to leukemia and lymphoma
patients who previously were too old to
qualify.
Hospitals traditionally have not offered
stem cell transplants to patients older than
60 due to potentially severe complications.
But Loyola now offers this treatment to
patients in their 60s and early 70s.
"A lot of seniors are taking very good care
of themselves. They're in excellent shape,
even running marathons and half-marathons,"
said Dr. Patrick Stiff, director of Loyola's
Cardinal Bernardin Cancer Center.
"As they potentially could live another 15
or 20 years, we believe they are just as
worthy of receiving transplants as people in
their teens or 20s."
The median age of patients who are diagnosed
with leukemia is between 65 and 68. For
patients older than 60 who have aggressive
forms of leukemia and undergo conventional
therapy, the five-year survival rate is less
than 5 percent.
But six of the first seven plus-60 patients
who have undergone umbilical cord blood stem
cell transplants at Loyola have survived.
"They're doing much better than we
anticipated," Stiff said.
William Karris of Carol Stream, Il. was 65
when he received a cord blood transplant at
Loyola for an aggressive form of chronic
lymphocytic leukemia.
Without the transplant, Karris was expected
to live only about six months. The
transplant was successful, and Karris now is
in remission more than a year and a half
after transplant. The chances of a relapse
are less than 2 percent, Stiff said.
Karris now plans to go ahead with a delayed
knee-replacement surgery, and then return to
work as a Bellwood police officer. "I feel
pretty good," he said.
A stem cell transplant can be a grueling and
risky procedure. The patient undergoes
high-dose chemotherapy, and sometimes
high-dose radiation, to kill cancer cells.
The treatment also destroys the patient's
immune system cells.
To compensate, the patient receives an
infusion of donor stem cells, which develop
into healthy immune cells.
In addition to the side effects of
chemotherapy and radiation, a patient is at
risk for severe infections until the new
immune system takes hold.
And once established, the new immune system
can attack the patient's own body, a
condition called graft-vs.-host disease. In
such cases, the patient receives drugs to
suppress the immune system, which in turn
can increase the risk of infections.
Donor cells can come from a donor's bone
marrow or from a newborn's umbilical cord
blood.
Stiff said cord blood transplants are easier
on elderly patients than bone marrow
transplants. Less than 10 percent of cord
blood transplant patients experience
significant graft-vs.-host disease, compared
with about 50 percent of patients who
receive bone marrow transplants.
A disadvantage of cord blood transplants is
the relatively small number of stem cells
that can be obtained from a newborn's
umbilical cord blood.
This can lengthen the time it takes to
establish a new immune system in the
transplant patient. Loyola is participating
in a clinical trial in which cord blood is
sent to a laboratory that expands the stem
cell population to nearly twice the original
number.
"We think this technology has the potential
of reducing the misery of patients who
receive stem cell transplants and improving
their survival," Stiff said.
Loyola has treated more than 3,000 patients
with stem cell transplants, more than any
other center in Illinois, and has one of the
largest unrelated donor transplant programs
in the world. Loyola physicians are
currently focusing on umbilical cord blood
transplants and have a number of novel
therapies available for patients with
leukemia, lymphoma and multiple myeloma who
otherwise can not find a donor elsewhere.
Loyola has performed more than 90 cord blood
transplants, and a new study has shown that
a center's experience is indeed an important
factor in patient outcomes.
Researchers examined records of 514 cord
blood transplant patients in North America
and Europe. They found that, 100 days after
the transplant, the mortality rate was more
than twice as high at centers with limited
experience (fewer than 10 transplants). The
study is published in the January, 2011
issue of the journal Bone
Marrow Transplantation.