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Hadeel Halalsheh


hadeel_fx@yahoo.com

Journal articles

2011
Hadeel Halalsheh, Najyah Abuirmeileh, Rawad Rihani, Faiha Bazzeh, Luna Zaru, Faris Madanat (2011)  Outcome of childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia in Jordan.   Pediatr Blood Cancer Feb  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: Accurate data about childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) in low- and middle-income countries are lacking. Our study is designed to assess survival of childhood ALL at King Hussein Cancer Center (KHCC) using modified St. Jude Children's Research Hospital protocols. PATIENTS AND METHODS: We reviewed the medical records of children 1-18 years of age who were diagnosed with ALL and treated at KHCC from January 2003 through December 2009. Disease characteristics and outcome were analyzed. RESULTS: Over a 7-year period, 300 children with ALL were treated. One hundred and seventy-three (57.7%) were males and 127 (42.3%) were females. The median age at diagnosis was 5 years. One hundred and fifty-seven (52.3%) children were classified as low-risk, 118 (39.3%) were standard-risk and 25 (8.3%) were high-risk. Two hundred and sixty-two (88.5%) children had pre-B cell phenotype and 34 (11.5%) had T-cell phenotype. Two hundred and seventy-three (91.3%) children were classified as having CNS I disease, 24 (8%) had CNS II, and 2 (0.67%) had CNS III. Cytogenetic abnormalities included: t(12;21) in 30 (12%) children and t(9;22) in 18 (7.4%). Four (1.3%) children died in induction, 6 (2%) died in first remission and 27 (9%) relapsed. After a median follow-up of 34.5 months (range 0.32-84.5), the estimated 5-year event free survival and overall survival were 80% and 89%, respectively. CONCLUSION: Treatment protocols developed by major cooperative groups and institutions to treat childhood ALL was successfully adapted and suggest that such an approach may be useful in other low- and middle-income countries. Pediatr Blood Cancer © 2011 Wiley-Liss, Inc.
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2010
Rawad Rihani, Isam Lataifeh, Hadeel Halalsheh, Ayad Ahmed Hussein, Abdulhadi Al-Zaben, Fawzi Abdel-Rahman, Mahmoud Sarhan (2010)  Haploidentical stem cell transplantation as a salvage therapy for cord blood engraftment failure in a patient with Fanconi anemia.   Pediatr Blood Cancer 55: 3. 580-582 Sep  
Abstract: A 7-year-old male with Fanconi Anemia who developed primary graft failure following one antigen-mismatched unrelated cord blood transplantation and a nonradiation-based conditioning, underwent a second hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT) from his 2-loci mismatched haploidentical father, using a nonradiation-based regimen, 79 days after the first HSCT. A sustained hematological engraftment was achieved at 9 days post-second HSCT. At 15 months post-second HSCT; the patient demonstrated normal blood counts, sustained donor chimerism, and no evidence of GVHD. Haploidentical HSCTs as primary or secondary sources of stem cells, with appropriate T-cell depletion, may be a readily available option in the absence of HLA-matched related or unrelated donors.
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