Bone marrow cell dose and kinetics of recovery following allogeneic marrow transplantation in man
- 1 December 1983
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Springer Nature in Annals of Hematology
- Vol. 47 (6) , 355-360
- https://doi.org/10.1007/bf00320350
Abstract
In 50 patients transplanted for acute or chronic leukemia we studied the correlation between the number of infused bone marrow cells/kg recipient body weight and the time needed for engraftment. Engraftment was arbitrarily defined as the first day of 1×109 leukocytes/1 and of 20×109 reticulocytes/1 after the posttransplantation nadir. There is a negative non-linear correlation between the duration of leukopenia following marrow transplantation and the amount of transfused nucleated cells (p=0.01). Since the incidence of infectious or hemorrhagic complications depends directly on the duration of aplasia it is justifiable to give a maximal cell dose.This publication has 10 references indexed in Scilit:
- Constant Post-Irradiation Repopulation Rates and Linear Relationship between Cellular Blood Response and Number of Transplanted Bone Marrow Cells in Inbread MiceScandinavian Journal of Haematology, 2009
- Aplastic AnemiaNew England Journal of Medicine, 1982
- NEW DEVELOPMENTS IN CLINICAL BONE-MARROW TRANSPLANTATION FOR LEUKEMIA1981
- Bone-Marrow TransplantationNew England Journal of Medicine, 1975
- Technique for Human Marrow GraftingBlood, 1970
- A Quantitative Study of Bone Marrow Grafting: Implications for Human Bone Marrow InfusionBritish Journal of Cancer, 1962
- Marrow Transplants in Lethally Irradiated Dogs Given MethotrexateBlood, 1962
- Preservation of Radiation Recovery Factor in Frozen MarrowBlood, 1957
- The Effect of the Amount of Isologous Bone Marrow Injected on the Recovery of Hematopoietic Organs, Survival and Body Weight after Lethal Irradiation Injury in MiceBlood, 1957
- A NEW MEASURE OF RANK CORRELATIONBiometrika, 1938