Publication | Closed Access
Severe combined immunodeficiency disease. Characterization of the disease and results of transplantation.
174
Citations
7
References
1977
Year
ImmunodeficienciesTransplantation MedicineImmunologyPathologyGirl DonorsImmunotherapyBone Marrow FailureStem Cell TransplantationHematologyGraft SurvivalCell TransplantationPrimary ImmunodeficiencyTransplantation SurgeryTransplantationMlc Positive DonorsAutoimmunityImmunologic DiseaseBlood TransplantationHivImmunodeficiency DiseaseTransplant ImmunologyMedicineGraft Rejection
Pretransplant and posttransplant data for 69 patients with severe combined immunodeficiency disease are presented. Both B and T lymphocyte functions were absent in approximately 80% of the children and markedly depressed in the remainder. Transplantation of marrow from HLA genotypically identical donors provided the highest six-month survival rate (63%); six-month survival rates for patients who received fetal tissue transplants (43%) or marrow from mixed leukocyte culture (MLC) negative donors (38%) were significantly higher (P less than .05) than for patients treated with marrow from MLC positive donors (5%). Additional factors appeared to influence survival and the severity of graft-vs-host (GVH) disease. Patients more than 6 months of age had more intense GVH disease than younger patients. Survival rates were lower and GVH disease more intense when boys received transplants from girl donors than the reverse.
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