Summary:From April 1998 to March 2000, a cytomegalovirus (CMV) antigenemia-guided pre-emptive approach for CMV disease was evaluated in 77 adult patients who received allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation at the National Cancer Center Hospital. A CMV antigenemia assay was performed at least once a week after engraftment. High-level antigenemia was defined as a positive result with 10 or more positive cells per 50 000 cells and low-level antigenemia was defined as less than 10 positive cells. Among the 74 patients with initial engraftment, 51 developed positive antigenemia. Transplantation from alternative donors and the development of grade II-IV GVHD were independent risk factors for positive antigenemia. Ganciclovir was administered as pre-emptive therapy in 39 patients in a risk-adapted manner. None of the nine low-risk patients with low-level antigenemia as their initial positive result developed high-level antigenemia even though ganciclovir was withheld. Only one patient developed early CMV disease (hepatitis) during the study period. CMV antigenemia resolved in all but two cases, in whom ganciclovir was replaced with foscarnet. In eight patients, however, the neutrophil count decreased to 0.5 × 10 9 /l or less after starting ganciclovir, including three with documented infections and two with subsequent secondary graft failure. The total amount of ganciclovir and possibly the duration of high-dose ganciclovir might affect the incidence of neutropenia. We concluded that antigenemia-guided pre-emptive therapy with a decreased dose of ganciclovir and response-oriented dose adjustment might be appropriate to decrease the toxicity of ganciclovir without increasing the risk of CMV disease. Bone Marrow Transplantation (2001) 27, 437-444.
Summary:To evaluate the efficacy of long-term administration of acyclovir as prophylaxis against varicella-zoster virus (VZV) reactivation, we analyzed the medical records of 86 consecutive adult patients who obtained engraftment after allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation from January 1996 to March 2000. We started longterm low-dose (400 mg/day) oral administration of acyclovir in June 1999, and this was continued until the end of immunosuppressive therapy after transplantation. There was no breakthrough reactivation of VZV in patients receiving acyclovir. Five patients who were receiving cyclosporine or prednisolone developed VZV reactivation after discontinuing acyclovir. With this prophylaxis, the cumulative incidence of VZV reactivation at 1 year after transplantation decreased from 33% to 10% (P = 0.025). On multivariate analysis, the use of long-term acyclovir was identified as a significant independent parameter for the development of VZV reactivation. These findings suggest the efficacy of longterm prophylaxis with low-dose acyclovir. Resumption of acyclovir upon restarting immunosuppressive therapy might be important for the further prevention of VZV reactivation. The benefit of long-term low-dose acyclovir should be confirmed prospectively. Bone Marrow Transplantation (2001) 28, 689-692.
Abstract. We present a type-based deadlock-freedom verification for concurrent programs with non-block-structured lock primitives and mutable references. Though those two features are frequently used, they are not dealt with in a sufficient manner by previous verification methods. Our type system uses a novel combination of lock levels, obligations and ownerships. Lock levels are used to guarantee that locks are acquired in a specific order. Obligations and ownerships guarantee that an acquired lock is released exactly once.
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