Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0018133 (
graft-versus-host disease
)
18,032
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
For patients with well-characterized, rapidly fatal, nonmalignant immunodeficiency disorders, such as SCID, the decision to proceed with allogeneic SCT is clear-cut. For patients with many other disorders, this decision can be extremely difficult. Disorders such as
LAD
or CGD have a variable natural history. Each patient must be considered individually, with the risk for SCT-related morbidity and mortality carefully weighed against that of the underlying disease. Significant advances during the past 10 years have made SCT a much safer procedure. Use of nonmyeloablative conditioning regimens as a means of reducing toxicity of high-dose chemotherapy and irradiation hold great promise. Highly immunosuppressive, nonchemotherapeutic agents that inhibit graft rejection or
GVHD
by blocking the critical costimulatory component of the T-cell receptor-antigen interaction are beginning to emerge and may be ideal for SCT of nonmalignant diseases. Therefore, the risk-benefit equation must be reassessed each year as the severity of patients' disorders is better defined and techniques of SCT improve.
...
PMID:Stem-cell transplantation for inherited immunodeficiency disorders. 1113 Oct 1
The severe form of leukocyte adhesion deficiency type I (LAD-I) usually leads to death early in life. Allogeneic haematopoietic transplantation is the only cure. Unrelated transplantation has been reported only once. We describe three children with
LAD
-I transplanted with T cell non-depleted bone marrow from unrelated HLA-matched donors. All patients engrafted, one of them at second transplant. One patient developed grade I and one grade II acute
GVHD
. Two patients are alive, one of them with a decrease in CD11/CD18 expression. Early referral for HLA-matched unrelated BMT is a reasonable option for patients with
LAD
-I lacking an HLA-matched related donor.
...
PMID:Unrelated bone marrow transplantation for leukocyte adhesion deficiency. 1247 95
Leukocyte adhesion deficiency type I (LAD-I) is an inherited immunodeficiency disorder caused by defective expression of the leukocyte integrins, namely, lymphocyte function-associated antigen 1, Mac-1, and p150, 95, and is associated with obstructed cell adhesion, migration, and phagocytosis. Patients suffer from various bacterial or fungal infections and their prognoses are poor. The only curative treatment is hematopoietic stem cell transplantation. Conventional myeloablative transplantations have been performed, but with unsatisfactory results. We performed the first successful nonmyeloablative unrelated marrow transplantation for a 20-year-old female
LAD
-I patient, who suffered from recurrent and occasionally life-threatening infections such as cellulitis, gingivostomatitis, and sepsis. We adopted a preparative regimen with fludarabine, cyclophosphamide, and low-dose total-body irradiation, and tacrolimus and short-term methotrexate as immunosuppressants. This procedure was sufficiently immunosuppressive to obtain stable engraftment without remarkable complications, and
graft-versus-host disease
was controllable. Dramatic improvement of her disease was observed, supported by the normal expressions of integrins. Twenty one months after transplantation, she is well with a Karnofsky score of 100. Thus, nonmyeloablative transplantation is considered a feasible method for
LAD
-I.
...
PMID:Successful nonmyeloablative bone marrow transplantation for leukocyte adhesion deficiency type I from an unrelated donor. 1767 74