Bone marrow transplantation for immunodeficiency diseases |
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Authors: | R A Good |
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Abstract: | Allogeneic bone marrow transplantation (BMT) was applied in 1968 to treat severe combined immunodeficiency disease (SCID). Almost simultaneously, marrow from an MHC-matched donor corrected the immunological deficiency of a patient with Wiscott-Aldrich Syndrome (WAS). In the first successful treatment of X-linked SCID the match was imperfect and, although SCID was cured, a graft vs. host reaction caused pancytopenia. A second BMT from the same donor successfully treated a complicating aplastic anemia. Subsequently, it has been possible to cure most patients with SCID who are in reasonably good condition at the time of BMT without other manipulation if a matched sibling donor is available. Successes are reported from Holland, France, Italy, England, Scandinavia, Japan, Germany, and from many centers in the United States. Similarly, BMT is used to correct SCID due to adenosine deaminase (ADA) deficiency or nucleoside phosphorylase (NP) deficiency, which underlie two forms of SCID. Bone marrow transplantation using HLA-matched sibling donors can now treat, successfully, at least eight genetically separable forms of SCID. Highly lethal defects of phagocytic function (including LFA-1, MO-1, CR-3 deficiencies, IL-2 and IL-1 receptor deficiencies), defects of killing after phagocytosis (as in chronic granulomatous disease, WAS, and Kostmann's Syndrome), and certain inborn errors of metabolism can be cured by BMT.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS) |
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