• Medical oncology · Dec 1999

    Reduced bone marrow stem cell pool and progenitor mobilisation in multiple myeloma after melphalan treatment.

    • L M Knudsen, T Rasmussen, L Jensen, and H E Johnsen.
    • Department of Haematology and the Stem Cell Laboratory, Herlev Hospital, University of Copenhagen, Denmark.
    • Med. Oncol. 1999 Dec 1;16(4):245-54.

    AbstractThe content of stem cells was analysed in bone marrow samples from 75 multiple myeloma patients. In unstimulated bone marrow the percentage of CD34+ cells was significantly reduced in 11 patients previously treated with melphalan-prednisolone (MP)(median= 0.15%) compared to median 0.87% in 31 untreated patients (P=0.0001). The bone marrow cellularity in the two groups did not differ. There was no correlation between the number of courses or total dose of melphalan and content of CD34+ cells in the bone marrow. The clonogenicity as well as the ability to expand the marrow stem cell pool during growth factor treatment were also reduced in MP treated patients compared to untreated patients. Analysis of different subsets of CD34+ cells revealed no influence on the pre B cell compartment in the bone marrow by MP treatment, but the committed stem cells (CD34+CD38+) were reduced more than the uncommitted stem cells (CD34+CD38-) in the MP treated group compared to the untreated patients. Mobilisation to and harvest of total number of CD34+ cells from peripheral blood was also reduced in the MP treated group. There was, however, no difference in the distribution between CD34+CD38+ and CD34+CD38- populations in the leukapheresis products in the untreated and the melphalan-treated group, suggesting selective mobilisation of CD34+CD38+ cells and/or differentiation of CD34+CD38-cells during growth factor stimulation. We conclude that melphalan decreased the number of stem cells in the bone marrow, the ability to expand the stem cell pool and mobilise stem cells to the pheripheral blood.

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