Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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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)

A patient with severe combined immunodeficiency received seven transplants of bone marrow from an HLA-B-compatible and HLA-D-compatible unrelated donor in an attempt to provide immunologic reconstitution. The first four transplants achieved restricted engraftment with evidence of rudimentary immunologic function. A fifth transplant, given after low-dose cyclophosphamide, produced reconstituion of cell-mediated immunity. Marrow aplasia developed after recontamination with a nonpathogenic microflora. Transplantation of marrow previously stored in liquid nitrogen was ineffective. A subsequent transplant, administered after high-dose cyclophosphamide, achieved durable engraftment, with complete hematopoietic and immunologic reconstitution. Seventeen months after transplantation, full functional engraftment persists. Graft-versus-host disease has been chronic and moderately severe, but limited to the skin and oral mucosa. Transplantation of marrow from unrelated histocompatible donors may provide a useful treatment for patients with severe combined immunodeficiency or aplastic anemia who lack a matched sibling or related donor.
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PMID:Reconstitution in severe combined immunodeficiency by transplantation of marrow from an unrelated donor. 2 51

A patient with aplastic anemia who was found to be homozygous for an HLA-D determinant shared by her unrelated parents achieved sustained engraftment and full restoration of hematopoietic and lymphoid function following a transplant from an HLA-A and -B nonidentical, ABO incompatible sibling who was heterozygous for the shared HLA-D specificity. Transplantation was complicated by transient graft-versus-host disease of moderate severity, which resolved completely following treatment with antithymocyte globulin and prednisone. The case indicates that patients found to be HLA-D-homozygous may be successfully transplanted from HLA-D-heterozygous sibling donors despite HLA-A and HLA-B incompatibilities, and thus further demonstrates the importance of the HLA-D region as a marker of donor-host histocompatibility.
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PMID:Successful transplantation of marrow from an HLA-A, -B, -D mismatched heterozygous sibling donor into an HLA-D-homozygous patient with aplastic anemia. 3 52

It now appears unequivocal that three markers exist in a linkage group in chromosome 6 of man: HLA-A, HLA-B and PGM3 (Fig. 1.) Tentatively, two other HLA loci and one Ir gene have been mapped close to HLA-B. The probable map order is HLA-A - HLA-C - HLA-B - HLA-D - Ir. The biological functions of these loci are unknown. However, HLA-A, B and C are important in allograft rejection. Other closely linked loci (HDR, CML) appear to be important in the first events of the allograft rejection (first set) and in generation of killer cells. HLA-D might be important in cellular recognition and graft-versus-host reactions (matching at HLA-D decreases the incidence and severity of graft-versus-host disease), and the Ir genes in the defense against infections. HLA-B and HLA-D loci are important markers in studies of disease susceptibility. HLA-B locus antigens HLA-B27 and HLA-B8 are frequently associated with arthritic or autoimmune disorders. HLA-D determinants have been found in association with multiple sclerosis and C2 deficiency (HLA-DW2); juvenile diabetes and Addison's disease (HLA-DW3) and adult type of rheumatoid arthritis (HLA-DW4).
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PMID:Immunogenetic aspects of allotransplantation. 13 74

Major histocompatibility complex antigens are critical to an animal's immune response. In most animals, the extreme polymorphism of MHC molecules complicates studies of the role of this complex in the immune response. In mice, however, MHC haplotype-homozygous inbred strains have been developed which are invaluable in the study of the immune system and the search for immune response genes. The human MHC bears many similarities to its murine equivalent with regard to antigen structure and polymorphism; furthermore, a number of combinations of specific MHC alleles between HLA-B and HLA-DR/DQ (extended haplotypes) are found in people more commonly than predicted by individual allele frequencies. Over 30 percent of Caucasian haplotypes are extended haplotypes, and over 55 percent of individuals have at least one extended haplotype. Examples of the same extended haplotype, even in unrelated individuals, should either all have or lack any gene within the MHC region. The value of considering extended haplotypes in searching for associations between the MHC and diseases, or immune response, is shown in three examples: congenital adrenal hyperplasia, hepatitis B immunization, and transfusion-associated graft-versus-host disease.
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PMID:The major histocompatibility complex: the value of extended haplotypes in the analysis of associated immune diseases and disorders. 229 6

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

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

This paper discusses certain statistical issues arising in an analysis to relate HLA-B antigens to the incidence of graft-versus-host disease in a clinical study. The Cox regression method is used to develop a global test of the hypothesis of no association and to produce estimated relative-risk factors corresponding to the presence of each particular allele. Multiple-testing considerations are central to any attempt to identify pairs of alleles having significantly different relative-risk factors. A number of simultaneous-testing approaches are considered including cumulative P-value plotting and a direct simulation of the null distribution of the maximum pairwise ratio.
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PMID:HLA and disease: relative-risk regression methods and multiple testing considerations. 639 64

As of 31 December 1979, 39 patients in Seattle have received marrow grafts from donors other than HLA genotypically identical siblings. Sixteen transplants were between siblings, 21 from a parent to a child, one from a paternal uncle, and one from an unrelated donor. Ten patients had aplastic anemia and 29 had a hematological malignancy. As of 1 February 1980, only one of the ten patients transplanted for aplastic anemia is currently alive (greater than 1048 days) with a normal marrow and without graft-versus-host disease. This surviving patient was untransfused and received marrow from an HLA phenotypically identical mother. There were five episodes of graft rejection among the ten aplastic patients. Among the 29 patients transplanted for hematological malignancy, 12 (42%) are surviving from greater than 64 to greater than 995 days. Twelve of 29 patients were transplanted while in remission and eight (75%) are alive from greater than 148 to greater than 790 days. The two most frequent causes of death were relapse of leukemia and interstitial pneumonia. Only two patients died from complications clearly related to graft-versus-host disease. Five of the surviving patients were phenotypically identical with their donor for HLA, while seven were incompatible for some HLA determinants. One patient--donor pair was incompatible for HLA-D and DR as a result of HLA-B/D recombination, and six pairs were incompatible for HLA-A and/or B.
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PMID:Marrow transplantation from donors other than HLA identical siblings. 702 18

The rates of graft-versus-host disease (GVHD) and rejection are significantly higher among recipients of unrelated donor marrow (BM) than in recipients of marrow from HLA-identical siblings, even when donors and recipients are mixed lymphocyte culture (MLC) compatible and serologically and Dw identical. It has been hypothesized that phenotypically silent HLA class I and DP sequence mismatches might be associated with these differences, but little is known about their incidence. We have sequenced the HLA-A, HLA-B, HLA-C, HLA-DPA1, and HLA-DPB1 genes expressed by 12 unrelated marrow transplant pairs, 11 of whom were molecularly matched at DRB, DQA1, and DQB1 loci. Nine of these pairs were also HLA-A and HLA-B matched by serology. Six of these nine "HLA-identical" pairs were HLA-A (2 of 6), HLA-B (1 of 6), and HLA-C (6 of 6) mismatched at the sequence level. The mismatched class I alleles of all these pairs had strikingly different sequence motifs in the six specificity pockets of their antigen recognition site, and in five pairs they also had sequence differences at positions implicated in T-cell receptor (TCR) binding. Two of the three pairs who were serologically mismatched for one HLA-A or HLA-B antigen were also sequence mismatched at HLA-C. Finally, 10 of 11 pairs tested expressed different DP sequences. These data indicate that HLA class I, especially HLA-C, and DP sequence mismatches are frequent among unrelated subjects defined as HLA identical by current typing methods. We speculate that these sequence differences may explain, at least in part, the higher incidence of acute GVHD and rejection in unrelated BM transplantation as opposed to transplantation between HLA-identical siblings. Because of their high frequency, the role of HLA-A, HLA-B, HLA-C, and HLA-DP mismatches in transplantation outcome is now amenable to direct study.
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PMID:Frequent HLA class I and DP sequence mismatches in serologically (HLA-A, HLA-B, HLA-DR) and molecularly (HLA-DRB1, HLA-DQA1, HLA-DQB1) HLA-identical unrelated bone marrow transplant pairs. 820 3

Twenty-eight out of 31 children that underwent bone marrow transplantation (BMT) from unrelated donors between 1984 and 1995 received HLA-A, HLA-B and HLA-DR matched unrelated donor (MUD) marrows as defined by serologic HLA class I and genomic HLA class II typing. Compared with 28 case-matched controls transplanted with HLA identical sibling donors, MUD patients received a more intensive conditioning. Twenty-six patients (93%) engrafted while two died of septicaemia during the aplastic phase. Two patients rejected their grafts and four developed Evans syndrome. All controls engrafted without incidents of rejection or Evans syndrome. The probability of acute graft-versus-host disease (GVHD) of grade II or above was 27% after MUD-BMT and 7% in the controls. The 5-year probability of survival was 60% in MUD patients and 89% after sibling BMT (p = 0.03). Leukaemia-free survival was 60% with one relapse in the MUD patients, and 59% with five relapses in the sibling group. Three children who received a mismatched donor marrow died, two of severe GVHD and one after graft rejection. In conclusion, today, a matched unrelated donor BMT is an acceptable alternative for many children who need a BMT but lack a suitable related donor.
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PMID:Bone marrow transplantation in children using unrelated donors at Huddinge Hospital. 869 91


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