Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
3202704 Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology 2008 9 Pages PDF
Abstract

BackgroundBetween 1981 and 1995, 20 children with severe combined immunodeficiency (SCID; median age at transplant, 6.5 [range, 0.5-145] mo, 12 with serious infection) were treated with haploidentical T cell–depleted (anti-CD6 antibody) bone marrow (median number of 5.7 [0.8-18.8] × 108 nucleated cells/kg) from mismatched related donors (MMRDs), and 5 children with SCID (median age at transplant, 1.8 [0.5-5.0] mo, 1 with serious infection) were given unmanipulated bone marrow from matched related donors (MRDs). No conditioning or graft-versus-host disease (GvHD) prophylaxis was used.ObjectiveTo assess the outcomes of patients with SCID who received bone marrow from MMRDs or MRDs.MethodsWe reviewed the medical records of these 25 consecutive patients with SCID (4 with Omenn syndrome).ResultsOf the 20 patients who received bone marrow from MMRDs, 12 engrafted, 10 survived at a median age of 15.2 [10.0-19.1] years, 4 had chronic GvHD (lung, intestine, skin), 5 required intravenous immunoglobulin, and 8 attended school or college. Two of 5 patients who died had chronic GvHD, and 2 developed lymphoproliferative disease. Of the 5 patients who received bone marrow from MRDs, 5 engrafted, 5 survived at a median age of 23.3 [18.5-26] years, 1 had chronic GvHD (lung, skin), 2 required intravenous immunoglobulin, and 4 attended school or college.ConclusionsTreatment of critically ill patients with SCID with anti-CD6 antibody T cell–depleted MMRD marrow resulted in an overall 50% long-term survival of patients (83% survival of those engrafted). The principal barriers to long-term survival were delay in diagnosis, life-threatening infection, failure to engraft, and chronic GvHD. Educational goals were achieved in most of the survivors.

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