The treatment of chronic graft-versus-host disease (GVHD) may present a difficult therapeutic problem. We used thalidomide to treat six patients with severe chronic GVHD who failed to respond to standard immunosuppressive agents. Four of the six patients showed a clear response to thalidomide, with the fifth patient showing a partial response. The best results were seen in patients with chronic cutaneous GVHD. Two of the patients developed neurophysiological evidence of a peripheral neuropathy, associated with clinical signs in one patient. Measurement of thalidomide plasma levels and pharmacokinetic curves showed a significant inter-patient variation. Peak plasma levels varied from 0.47 to 1.46 micrograms/ml. Thalidomide has a role to play in the management of chronic GVHD and further studies are needed.
Up to date reference ranges were established for fasting renal excretion of calcium, phosphorus, and magnesium on 101 healthy children aged 2-15 years. A normal range for intact parathyroid hormone was also measured.The indices of calcium and magnesium excretion showed no correlation with age or sex so that a common range for all children could be established. The 97th centile values for urinary calcium:creatinine and magnesium:creatinine ratios were 0-69 mmol:mmol and 1-05 mmol:mmol respectively. The calculated tubular maximum for phosphate/litre of glomerular filtrate (TmPO4IGFR) showed no correlation with age with a geometric mean value of 1-67 mmol/l.The normal range for intact serum parathyroid hormone for the age group was 11-35 ng/l, which is lower than the adult normal range using the same assay. There was an inverse correlation between TmPO4IGFR and intact parathyroid hormone in this group of normal children.
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