1. Lymphocyte subsets recovery following allogeneic bone marrow transplantation (BMT): CD4+ cell count and transplant-related mortality.
- Author
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Berger M, Figari O, Bruno B, Raiola A, Dominietto A, Fiorone M, Podesta M, Tedone E, Pozzi S, Fagioli F, Madon E, and Bacigalupo A
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Cause of Death, Child, Child, Preschool, Female, Graft vs Host Disease etiology, Humans, Immunophenotyping, Male, Middle Aged, Multivariate Analysis, Transplantation, Homologous, CD4 Lymphocyte Count, Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation mortality
- Abstract
To assess the kinetics of lymphocyte subset recovery, 758 allografted patients were monitored by surface markers (CD3, CD4, CD8, CD56), with a 5-year follow-up. The donor was a matched sibling donor (MSD) (n=502) or an alternative donor (family mismatched or unrelated, AD) (n=256). The stem cell source was bone marrow for all patients. CD4+ cell recovery was influenced -- in univariate analysis -- by three factors: donor type, patient age and GvHD. This was not the case for CD8+ and CD56+ cells. The median CD4+ cell count on day +35 after HSCT was 86/mul. Patients achieving this CD4+ cell count had significantly lower transplant-related mortality (TRM) compared to patients who did not achieve this CD4+ cell count (20 vs 39%, P=0.00001), due to a lower risk of lethal infections (24 vs 47%, P=0.0003). In multivariate analysis MSD (RR 3.45, P=0.0001) and recipient age less than 16 years (RR 3.23, P=0.003) were significantly associated with a better CD4+ cell recovery. CD4+ counts on day +35 was predicted TRM (RR=1.97, P=0.0017) together with acute GvHD grade II-IV (RR 1.59, P=0.0097). No difference of TRM was observed for CD8+ and CD56+ cell counts.
- Published
- 2008
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