Abstract
Primitive hematopoietic cells released into the peripheral blood (PB) were studied in 50 patients with high-grade non-Hodgkin's lymphoma enrolled in a phase III trial of intensive weekly chemotherapy (VAPEC- B) alone or with granulocyte colony-stimulating factor (G-CSF). Mononuclear cells numbers were monitored and their in vitro growth potential assessed in clonogenic progenitor cell assays and in long- term culture. Total colony-forming cells (granulocyte-macrophage [GM], burst-forming unit, erythroid [BFU-E], Mix-CFC) were increased 40-fold (median) over baseline with chemotherapy alone and 106-fold with chemotherapy and G-CSF after the final dose. CD34+ cells were increased to a median of 4%, equivalent to that in normal bone marrow (BM) controls. Circulating colony-forming cell levels were maximal when the recovering total white blood cell (WBC) count reached 5 to 10 x 10(9)/L. The timing of the maximum was reproducible in individual patients. Therefore the WBC count can be used as a guide to the timing of leukapheresis. PB cells from normal controls' and patients' prechemotherapy were unable to sustain hemopoiesis in two-stage long- term cultures. In contrast, PB cells collected from patients primed with chemotherapy alone or chemotherapy with G-CSF at the time of predicted maximal colony-forming cell release were able to generate and sustain hematopoiesis in long-term cultures at a level comparable or superior to normal BM. These findings indicate that the use of G-CSF after routine outpatient chemotherapy stimulates maximal release of primitive hemopoietic cells into the circulation, including colony- forming cells and long-term culture-initiating cells. Their numbers are comparable with those in normal BM and are such that a single leukapheresis will usually yield enough cells for hemopoietic reconstitution after myeloablative chemotherapy.
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