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Query: UMLS:C0018133 (graft-versus-host disease)
18,032 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Bone marrow transplantation is emerging as a viable therapeutic approach to a number of diseases that are usually or uniformly fatal. We review here recent experiences in bone marrow transplantation in man at UCLA and in various other institutions throughout the world. We examine marrow transplantation in immunodeficiency diseases, acute leukemia, and aplastic anemia and consider the problems of infection in the transplant recipients. The applications of tissue typing to marrow transplantation and immunologic manipulations, which may influence engraftment and graft-versus-host disease, are also reported.
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PMID:Bone marrow transplantation in man. 0 Sep 37

As an alternative to bone-marrow transplantation, two infants with severe combined immunodeficiency who had no histocompatible donors were given intraperitoneal infusions of fresh liver cells from fetuses of eight and nine to 10 weeks. Transient graft-versus-host disease began at 42 and 52 days, respectively. Both infants had rises in T cells and declines in B cells by three months. No functional immunologic improvement occurred in the first infant, who died of pulmonary disease 10 months later. Clinical and functional immunologic improvement occurred in the other, who is now 19 months after transplantation. Lymphocyte responses to phytohemagglutinin and pokeweed mitogen were noted by three months, to concanavalin A by five months, and to allogeneic cells by eight months. Delayed cutaneous responsiveness to candida developed and IgM became norma. IgA and IgG remained low. Chimerism was demonstrated by a donor marker chromosome in metaphases from recipient lymphocytes. Fetal liver cells therefore reversed the immunodeficiency.
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PMID:Correction of severe combined immunodeficiency by fetal liver cells. 0 37

Bone marrow transplantation can be considered in any disease state resulting in the malfunction or absence of part or all bone marrow elements. Diseases such as aplastic anemia, leukemia, and immunodeficiency disease are being treated with bone marrow transplantation. As with any organ transplant, graft rejection is a possibility. In bone marrow transplantation, there is the additional, unique problem of graft versus host disease. In order to prevent or minimize graft rejection, the immunocompetence of the recipient and the degree of disparity between donor and recipient at the major histocompatibility complex (MHC) loci are considered. The results of bone marrow transplantation are variable, and the mortality rate is still relatively high. However, progress is being made, and in many instances, normal bone marrow function can be restored in patients with whom other treatment has failed.
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PMID:Bone marrow transplantation. 3 23

A chronic, debilitating syndrome related to graft-versus-host disease (GVHD) has been recognized in long-term survivors following allogeneic bone marrow transplantation. In six of 20 marrow graft recipients who survived for more than one year after receiving a transplant, this complication developed; they were studied to better define the syndrome. There was no association between the sex of either donor or recipient, HLA type, blood group, conditioning regimen or marrow cell dose and subsequent development of chronic GVHD. All six patients had mild to moderate manifestations of acute GVHD following prompt engraftment. Chronic GVHD was characterized in each patient by progression to scleroderma-like skin involvement with hyperkeratosis, reticular hyperpigmentation, atrophy with ulceration and fibrosis with limitation of joint movement. A sicca syndrome was prominent in five patients. Four patients had idiopathic interstitial pneumonitis. Infectious complications were frequent, and DNA viral infections were prominent. Autoimmune hemolytic anemia was present in three patients, and one patient had antinuclear antibody (ANA). A spectrum of immune abnormalities was observed including hypergammaglobulinemia, immunoglobulin M (IgM) paraprotein, elevated circulating immune complexes, plasma cell hyperplasia, lymphocytotoxic antibodies and autoantibodies to autologous or donor lymphocytes. Despite clinical similarity to collagen vascular diseases, none of these patients had anti-DNA antibodies or antibodies to smooth muscle, thyroid or extractable nuclear antigens. In one patient, a skin graft from the marrow donor remained healthy despite progressive involvement in recipient skin, whereas unrelated skin grafts were rejected. Immunosuppressive therapy and plasmapheresis have not been effective. Four patients have died (median survival 458 days from transplantation). Chronic GVHD appears to be a syndrome of disordered immune regulation features of immunodeficiency and autoimmunity.
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PMID:Chronic graft versus host disease: a syndrome of disordered immunity. 3 1

Bone marrow transplantation is an experimental approach to the treatment of patients with acute leukemia, aplastic anemia, and other neoplastic and genetic diseases. To date, long-term disease-free survival has been achieved in a small proportion of carefully selected patients with resistant acute leukemia. While results are not optimal, they are acceptable in late stage patients where there are no effective alterates. Major problems in marrow transplantation for leukemia include tumor resistance and a spectrum of immunologic complications including GVHD, immunodeficiency, and interstitial pneumonitis. Potential approaches to these problems have been suggested. Progress in any one area would have a substantial impact on improving survival and extending the applicability of marrow transplantation to patients at an earlier stage of their disease.
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PMID:Bone marrow transplantation in acute leukemia: current status and future directions. 4 7

The relationship between Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) and the host is profoundly disturbed by allogeneic bone marrow transplantation (BMT) because EBV resides in the recipient's hematopoietic system, which has to be destroyed in the majority of cases, and in the donor's hematopoietic system, i.e., the marrow graft. We have shown that EBV may be eradicated from some BMT recipients and that the virus may be transferred with the marrow graft. During the immediate post-transplant period oropharyngeal EBV excretion may occur which, by infecting passing B lymphocytes, may act as co-factor for acute graft-versus-host disease and help the virus to survive, despite the temporary depletion of its reservoir. The coexistence of totally different EBV strains in BMT recipients but not in healthy, untransfused controls, suggests that superinfection may by possible in case of immunodeficiency; alternatively, transfer of the virus by the reservoir itself (the B lymphocytes) might be the only effective route for superinfection. The generation of 'variant' strains during viral replication may form the basis of the vast polymorphism between wild-type EBV isolates in the population.
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PMID:Epstein-Barr virus infection in allogeneic marrow grafting: lessons for transplant physicians and virologists. 132 90

Graft-vs.-host reaction (GVHR) induced in non-irradiated F1 mice with DBA/2J parental spleen and lymph node (LN) cells usually does not lead to acute GVH disease (GVHD). This contrasts with the GVHR induced in other parent-F1 combinations involving both major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class I and class II differences between donor and host. Most signs of acute GVHD in non-irradiated F1 mice relate to immunodeficiency following destruction of the lymphohemopoietic system of the host, which leads to wasting and death due to infections. This sequence of events is prevented when donor lymphoid cells, originating from grafted stem cells, repopulate the destroyed lymphohemopoietic system of the host. To examine whether a "silent" repopulation of the F1 host by donor stem cells might underly the absence of clinical signs of acute GVHD when GVHR is induced with DBA/2J lymphoid cells, GVHR was induced with LN cells, which do not contain stem cells. Indeed, GVHR induced in (C57BL/10 x DBA/2J)F1 (BDF1) mice with 80 x 10(6) DBA/2J LN cells led to acute GVHD. Signs of acute GVHD such as wasting and death did not occur when donor stem cells, from an inoculum of DBA/2J spleen and LN cells, were allowed to repopulate the lymphohemopoietic system of the host. The effect of donor stem cells on clinical signs of acute GVHD was more apparent when (B10.D2 x DBA/2J)F1, instead of DBA/2J, lymphoid cells were used to induce GVHR. The detection of alloreactive anti-host cytotoxic T lymphocyte (CTL) activity during acute GVHD induced with DBA/2J donor lymphoid cells supports the hypothesis that such CTL contribute to the destruction of the host immune system in acute GVHD.
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PMID:Protection from lethal graft-vs.-host disease by donor stem cell repopulation. 134 16

To assess the hypothesis that the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) might mimic major histocompatibility complex (MHC) allodeterminants and interact with T-cell receptors (TCRs) of alloreactive T-cells, we have done a preliminary analysis of the range of alpha beta TCR gene products in 16 HIV-1-seropositive individuals with normal CD4 counts and in 16 healthy HIV-1-negative controls. Using a panel of monoclonal antibodies with a two-colour direct immunofluorescence method, we found a significant increase in the expression of the V beta 5.3 subfamily in the HIV-positive patient group compared with controls (p less than 0.01). Selected increase in expression of V beta sequences has been described in various autoimmune conditions and our findings raise the possibility that the immunopathological damage from HIV infection may be due to the induction of autoreactivity. If HIV does mimic MHC II, the normal immune response to the virus could represent an autoimmune process similar to graft-versus-host disease.
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PMID:T-cell receptor variable gene products and early HIV-1 infection. 135 71

Diarrhoea and weight loss are found in more than 50% of patients with the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS). In some patients the symptoms can be very severe, leading to death even in the absence of opportunistic infections. In 30% of these patients, enteric pathogens cannot be identified, and approximately only half of the identifiable aetiologic agents of diarrhoea in patients infected with the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) were treatable with antibiotics. Immunoglobulins from bovine colostrum (Lactobin, Biotest, Dreieich, FRG) contain high titers of antibodies against a wide range of bacterial, viral and protozoal pathogens as well as against various bacterial toxins. Lactobin (LIG) is quite resistant to 24-h incubation with gastric juice. In a multi-center pilot study 37 immunodeficiency patients with chronic diarrhoea [29 HIV-infected patients, 2 patients with common variable immunodeficiency (CVID), one unidentified immunodeficiency, five patients with graft versus host disease (GvHD) following bone marrow transplantation] were treated with oral LIG (10 g/day for 10 days). Good therapeutic effects were observed. Out of 31 treatment periods in 29 HIV-infected patients 21 gave good results leading to transient (10 days) or long-lasting (more than 4 weeks) normalisation of the stool frequency. The mean daily stool frequency decreased from 7.4 to 2.2 at the end of the treatment. Eight HIV-infected patients showed no response. The diarrhoea recurred in 12 patients within 4 weeks (32.4%), while 19 patients were free of diarrhoea for at least 4 weeks (51.3%). In 5 patients intestinal cryptosporidiosis disappeared following oral LIG treatment. LIG treatment was also beneficial in 4 out of 5 GvHD patients.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Treatment of diarrhoea in human immunodeficiency virus-infected patients with immunoglobulins from bovine colostrum. 139 28

In the decade since the early 1980s, the increasing use of immunosuppressive therapy for cancer and autoimmune disease, as well as for organ transplantation, has combined with the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome epidemic to increase greatly the incidence of opportunistic infections and other complications of the gastrointestinal tract. Consequently, barium fluoroscopic and cross-sectional imaging studies tailored to address these problems are no longer uncommon. Although overlap exists, there are radiographic patterns that can direct the diagnosis to an opportunistic infection and sometimes to a specific pathogen. This article describes and illustrates the radiographic findings of gastrointestinal superinfection with Candida albicans, cytomegalovirus, Cryptosporidium spp, herpes simplex virus, Mycobacterium tuberculosis, M avium-intracellulare, and human immunodeficiency virus. Other gastrointestinal tract complications of immunosuppression are discussed, including graft-versus-host disease following bone marrow transplantation, typhlitis, and pseudomembranous colitis.
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PMID:Gastrointestinal tract in the immunocompromised host: opportunistic infections and other complications. 141 Mar 32


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