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Predictive Factors in Chronic Graft-Versus-Host Disease in Patients with Aplastic Anemia Treated by Marrow Transplantation from HLA-Identical Siblings
287
Citations
33
References
1983
Year
ImmunologyHla-identical SiblingsRelative RiskImmunotherapyAplastic AnemiaTranslational MedicineBone Marrow FailureStem Cell TransplantationHematologyGraft SurvivalCell TransplantationTransplantationMarrow TransplantationAutoimmune DiseasePredictive FactorsAutoimmunityEpidemiologyMedicineGraft Rejection
One hundred ten of 175 patients with aplastic anemia conditioned by cyclophosphamide had sustained engraftment of marrow from human leukocyte antigen (HLA)-identical siblings and lived for more than 6 months. Forty-nine of the 110 patients developed chronic graft-versus-host disease between 85 and 464 days. Ninety-seven patients are alive from 1.4 to 11 years after engraftment; 13 died between 208 and 726 days. Twenty of the 36 surviving patients with chronic graft-versus-host disease have Karnofsky performance scores of 100%, 7 of 90%, 5 of 80%, 1 of 70%, 2 of 60%, and 1 of 40%. Our analysis, using a binary logistic regression model, identified three factors predicting chronic graft-versus-host disease: moderate to severe acute graft-versus-host disease with an estimated relative risk of 11.65; increasing patient age; and the use of viable donor buffy coat cells in addition to the marrow to prevent graft rejection. The last two factors were significant only in patients without acute graft-versus-host disease.
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