Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0002874 (aplastic anemia)
5,905 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

With the aim to detect genotypically identical donors for patients suffering from some type of leukemia or aplastic anemia, HLA antigens and MLC reactivity were determined in 72 families, having together 209 children. HLA identical, MLC negative sibling donors were found for 31 patients, i.e. 43%. Compared to the healthy population, no significant differences were found in the frequency of HLA antigens and haplotypes in 58 leukemic patients. Two recombinations were recorded, one between the loci HLA-A and HLA-B, and the other one between HLA-B and HLA-D/DR. Only 9 persons (2.5%) homozygous for HLA-D antigens were found in the whole series of 353 subjects investigated.
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PMID:[Possibilities of finding identical HLA donor-recipient pairs for bone marrow transplantation]. 214 57

HLA antigens and MLC reactivity were ascertained in 69 families, having altogether 198 children, with the aim to find genotypically identical donors for patients suffering from some type of leukemia or aplastic anemia. HLA identical, MLC negative sibling donors were found for 29 patients, i.e. 42.03%. In 55 leukemic patients the frequency of HLA antigens and haplotypes was calculated. No significant differences were found as compared to the healthy population. One recombination between HLA-A and HLA-B and one between HLA-B and HLA-D/DR loci were observed.
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PMID:Occurrence rate of the HLA-identical pair donor-recipient for bone marrow transplantation. 214 19

The expression of HLA class I was assessed on erythrocytes by haemagglutination with monoclonal antibodies to monomorphic epitopes on the heavy and light (beta 2-microglobulin) chains. Previously, enhancement of HLA class I expression was observed on erythrocytes of many patients with systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) and chronic lymphatic leukaemia (CLL), and we have now tested erythrocytes from patients (and 130 normal controls) with other auto-immune diseases and renal and haematological disorders. The striking enhancement in patients with SLE and CLL was confirmed. A significant increase in expression was also observed in aplastic anaemia patients following bone marrow transplantation and in renal patients with primary glomerulonephritis who had received a transplant. No class I was expressed by erythrocytes from many patients with inherited haemoglobinopathies and high reticulocyte counts, which suggests that the enhancement in SLE patients cannot be accounted for by immature or young erythrocyte populations. The distribution of HLA-A and -B types in the patients with enhanced class I expression did not relate to those antigens previously detected more frequently on erythrocytes, B7(Bga), B17(Bgb), A28(Bgc), B8 or A10, and the enhancement was not associated with any particular HLA types.
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PMID:Erythroid HLA class I expression in 300 patients with haematological, renal and rheumatological disorders. 239 73

Data were obtained from 46 patients with severe aplastic anemia (SAA) who received bone marrow transplants (BMT) from donors other than genotypically HLA-identical siblings. The data were collected in the SAA Registry of the European Bone Marrow Transplant Group. The donors were non-HLA-identical siblings in six cases, parents in 28 cases, a son in one case and unrelated individuals in 11 cases. Fifteen donor-recipient pairs were HLA-A, -B and -DR identical and mutually non-reactive in mixed lymphocyte culture; nine were mismatched at one locus, 17 were mismatched at two or more loci and in five cases data were not available for D/DR determinants. Actuarial survival was predicted by the degree of mismatch. It was 45% for phenotypically HLA-identical grafts, 25% for grafts mismatched at one locus and 11% for graft mismatched at more than one locus. Whether the graft was derived from a family member or an unrelated donor seemed to be less important and results were comparable. Age, patient sex and year of transplant had no significant influence on survival. The use of cyclosporine (CSA) for graft-versus-host disease (GVHD) prophylaxis (n = 21, survival 34%) appeared superior to both methotrexate (n = 9, survival 11%) and to CSA with T cell depletion of donor marrow (n = 13, survival 14%). The causes of death were rejection (n = 15), GVHD (n = 13), pneumonitis (n = 5) and infection (n = 1). Twelve patients are alive at 16-84 months post-BMT.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Bone marrow transplantation for severe aplastic anemia from donors other than HLA identical siblings: a report of the BMT Working Party. 306 21

68 patients with aplastic anaemia, their parents and healthy siblings were typed for HLA-A, B and DR antigens. Among the patients there is an overrepresentation of DR2. The parents of affected children show an increased compatibility at the DR locus. This situation could favour the expression of recessive gene(s) involved in haematopoiesis and located in the HLA locus.
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PMID:Increased frequency of DR2 in patients with aplastic anaemia and increased DR sharing in their parents. 345 2

130 patients with severe aplastic anaemia, conditioned with high-dose cyclophosphamide, showed sustained engraftment of marrow from HLA-identical siblings. Most patients (55%) had no acute graft-versus-host disease (GVHD), 11% had transient grade I, and 34% had moderate to severe (grades II-IV) acute GVHD. The relation between the donors' (and the patients') HLA antigens and the incidence of grades I-IV acute GVHD was explored. There was no association with HLA-A antigens, but a significant correlation with HLA-B antigens. Patients with HLA-B18 had an estimated acute GVHD incidence nearly three times that of other patients, whereas the incidence in the presence of HLA-B8 or HLA-Bw35 was estimated to be about half that in the absence of these alleles.
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PMID:Association between HLA-B antigens and acute graft-versus-host disease. 613 49

One hundred seventy-five patients with severe aplastic anemia were treated by high-dose cyclophosphamide and HLA-A, -B, and -D-identical sibling marrow transplants. Thirty-eight patients rejected their grafts. Four of the 38 showed autologous marrow recovery as determined by blood genetic markers. The remarkable feature of one case following autologous marrow recovery was the presence of unidirectional proliferative and cytotoxic responses of circulating host lymphocytes to marrow donor lymphocytes in mixed lymphocyte culture and cell-mediated lympholysis. Presumably these responses were the result of in vivo sensitization to those non-HLA antigens for which donor and recipient differed.
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PMID:Autologous marrow recovery and sensitization to non-HLA antigens after HLA-identical marrow transplantation for aplastic anemia. 621 86

In this chapter, we have considered the theoretical and practical background of bone marrow transplantation. The immune response and its regulation by genes within the major histocompatibility complex, particularly of the I region of the mouse and of the HLA-D/DR region in man, is of central importance in both graft acceptance (rejection) and graft-versus-host disease. Methods which are available for typing alleles at the HLA-A, -C, -B, -DR and complotype (BF, C2, C4A, C4B) loci, have been considered in detail. The extent to which recombination affects specific alleles on haplotypes within families is discussed, as is the occurrence of linkage disequilibrium and extended haplotypes in populations of unrelated individuals. Because the HLA-DR and complotype region in man is thought to be critical for the success of bone marrow transplantation, methods for typing of HLA-D by both the HTC and PLT approaches have been examined. Although HLA-D/DR assignments are easily made in normal subjects, they are ambiguous in about 50 per cent of candidates for bone marrow transplantation, including, particularly, patients with aplastic anaemia, leukaemia, and severe combined immunodeficiency. In this setting, it is particularly important to obtain additional information by modification of HLA-D typing procedures and through complotype and GLO allele determinations in all family members. Finally, we can hope that there will be an increased possibility of using non-family donors through methods for removing cytotoxic T cells from donor marrow and through the identification, in the general population, of individuals who are genotypically similar or identical to the recipient. In this regard, the recognition that some 30 per cent of chromosome 6 in caucasians (50 per cent of individuals) bear extended haplotypes, which include a relatively fixed set of alleles particularly in the HLA-B, -DR, complotype and GLO regions, offers considerable promise.
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PMID:The MHC in human bone marrow allotransplantation. 622 38

From 1972-1983 53 patients underwent bone marrow transplantation. The median age was 18 years (3-41). 27 patients suffered from severe aplastic anaemia, 22 patients had acute leukaemia and 4 patients had chronic granulocytic leukaemia in chronic phase. Out of 22 patients with acute leukaemia, 2 had florid leukaemia, 2 had an early relapse and 18 patients were in first or second remission of their disease. 2/53 patients received a syngeneic transplant, 51/53 patients an allogeneic transplant. 47/51 patients had a HLA-A, B, C-identical, MLC-negative sibling donor, 1/51 had a HLA-A, B-C-identical, MLC-positive sibling donor, 2/51 a HLA-phaenotypical identical parental donor and 1/51 a HLA-identical, MLC-negative unrelated donor. The comparison of the results obtained in patients with severe aplastic anaemia transplanted from 1972-1979 with those transplanted from 1980-1983 shows that the bone marrow transplantation has to be performed in an early stage of the disease before the patients become multiple transfused, sensitized and severely infected and that the conditioning regimen for polytransfused patients has to be more intensive than in untransfused patients. From the patient group transplanted 1972-1979, only 1/14 patients is a long-term survivor in contrast to 8/13 patients transplanted from 1980-1983. 11/22 patients with acute leukaemia are alive between more than 5 years and 14 days after bone marrow transplantation. Only 1/4 patients, who were transplanted not in remission, is alive.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Bone marrow transplantation in panmyelopathy, acute leukemia and chronic myelocytic leukemia: results of the Ulm Transplantation Group]. 643 93

Forty-four patients with aplastic anemia or leukemia were given marrow grafts from siblings selected on the basis of HLA-A and -B identity and mutual nonreactivity of their lymphocytes in mixed leukocyte culture (MLC). Twenty-two to 1089 days after grafting, their lymphocytes (of donor origin) were tested for reactivity in MLC to lymphocytes from the host (cryopreserved before grafting), the marrow donor, and unrelated individuals. Lymphocytes from 14 of 22 long-term survivors with chronic graft-vs-host disease (GVHD) showed unidirectional reactivity in response to host lymphocytes manifested as high stimulation indices (SI) and high relative responses (RR). Lymphocytes from only 1 of 12 long-term survivors without chronic GVHD showed unidirectional reactivity to host lymphocytes. Statistical analysis showed that lymphocytes from patients with chronic GVHD displayed anti-host responses that were significantly higher than those of lymphocytes from either marrow donors (p < 0.001) or patients without GVHD (p = 0.03). Lymphocytes from 5 patients with and 5 without acute GVHD, tested shortly after marrow grafting, failed to show responses to host cells. The results are consistent with a participation of cell-mediated immunity of graft against host in chronic GVHD.
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PMID:Cell-mediated immunity to non-HLA antigens of the host by donor lymphocytes in patients with chronic graft-vs-host disease. 644 94


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