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Neurological and neuroradiological findings in long-term survivors of allogeneic bone marrow transplantation

โœ Scribed by Dr Claudio S. Padovan; Tarek A. Yousry; Michael Schleuning; Ernst Holler; Hans-Jochem Kolb; Andreas Straube


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1998
Tongue
English
Weight
754 KB
Volume
43
Category
Article
ISSN
0364-5134

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โœฆ Synopsis


Abstract

The aim of this study was to assess neurological, neuropsychological, and neuroradiological findings in longโ€term survivors of allogeneic bone marrow transplantation (BMT) who were recruited from a hematological outpatient clinic. In addition, risk factors for the development of late neurological complications were identified. In contrast to previous studies on autopsied patients, our study design provoked a bias away from increased neurological sequelae, because patients with early complications after BMT were excluded. Fiftyโ€nine allogeneic patients and 7 autologous BMT patients underwent clinical examination, short neuropsychological testing, and cranial magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) 34 ยฑ 26 months after BMT. The pathological results of the neurological examination (abnormal 64%) and the MRI examination (white matter lesions, 54%; atrophy, 11%) were associated with the occurrence of chronic graftโ€versusโ€host disease (GvHD) evolving from acute GvHD, with corticosteroid therapy and with cyclosporine medication. Neuropsychological impairment (cognitive deficits, 37%) was associated with longโ€term cyclosporine medication and age. No influence of preโ€BMT disease, BMT donor status, or the conditioning regimen was found. These results suggest that the frequent neurological abnormalities in longโ€term survivors of allogeneic BMT are associated with chronic GvHD and with the resulting immunosuppression as major risk factors.


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