STABLE ENGRAFTMENT AFTER MEGADOSE BLOOD STEM CELL TRANSPLANTATION ACROSS THE HLA BARRIER
- 1 July 1999
- journal article
- case report
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Transplantation
- Vol. 68 (1) , 87-88
- https://doi.org/10.1097/00007890-199907150-00017
Abstract
The case of a patient with chronic myelogenous leukemia who underwent transplantation with highly purified CD34+ peripheral blood stem cells from his two-antigen-mismatched mother is reported. No graft-versus-host disease has been observed so far and stable engraftment has been documented until day 100. Weekly analysis of chimerism in different cellular subsets was performed using a quantitative polymerase chain reaction assay for nine short tandem repeat markers in leukocytes sorted by fluorescence-activated cell sorting. No donor CD4+ or CD8+ T cells have been detected up to 3 months after transplantation, whereas a rapid increase of donor CD56+ natural killer (NK) cells was observed in parallel with circulating donor CD34+ progenitors and myeloid cells. Because the graft contained virtually no T and NK cells, we believe the rapid in vivo generation of NK cells supported stable engraftment across the HLA barrier. The differentiation of CD34+ progenitors into NK cells might be a distinct feature of megadose stem cell transplants.Keywords
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