1. Unrelated donor stem cell transplantation in adult patients with thalassemia.
- Author
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La Nasa, G., Caocci, G., Argiolu, F., Giardini, C., Locatelli, F., Vacca, A., Orofino, M. G., Piras, E., Addari, M. C., Ledda, A., and Contu, L.
- Subjects
STEM cell transplantation ,THALASSEMIA ,HEMOGLOBINOPATHY ,ORGAN donors ,HLA histocompatibility antigens ,CYCLOSPORINE ,METHOTREXATE ,GRAFT versus host disease - Abstract
Summary:Allogeneic SCT remains the only potential cure for patients with thalassemia. However, most BMT candidates lack a suitable family donor and require an unrelated donor (UD). We evaluated whether BMT using UDs in high-risk adult thalassemia patients can offer a probability of cure comparable to that reported employing an HLA-compatible sibling as donor. A total of 27 adult thalassemia patients (15 males and 12 females, median age 22 years) underwent BMT from a UD selected by high-resolution HLA molecular typing. The conditioning regimen consisted of Busulphan (BU, 14 mg/kg) plus Cyclophosphamide (CY, 120 or 160 mg/kg) in 12 cases and BU (14 mg/kg), Thiotepa (10 mg/kg) and CY (120–160 mg/kg) in the remaining 15 cases. Cyclosporine-A and short-term Methotrexate were used for graft-versus-host disease (GVHD) prophylaxis. In all, 19 patients (70%) are alive and transfusion-independent after a median follow-up of 43 months (range 16–137). A total of 10 patients (37%) developed grade II–IV acute GVHD and six (27%) chronic GVHD. Eight patients (30%) died from transplant-related causes. UD-BMT can cure more than two-thirds of adult thalassemia patients, and is a particularly attractive option for patients who are not compliant with conventional treatment.Bone Marrow Transplantation (2005) 36, 971–975. doi:10.1038/sj.bmt.1705173; published online 3 October 2005 [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2005
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