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Transplantation outcomes for severe combined immunodeficiency, 2000-2009.

Authors :
Pai, Sung-Yun
Pai, Sung-Yun
Logan, Brent R
Griffith, Linda M
Buckley, Rebecca H
Parrott, Roberta E
Dvorak, Christopher C
Kapoor, Neena
Hanson, Imelda C
Filipovich, Alexandra H
Jyonouchi, Soma
Sullivan, Kathleen E
Small, Trudy N
Burroughs, Lauri
Skoda-Smith, Suzanne
Haight, Ann E
Grizzle, Audrey
Pulsipher, Michael A
Chan, Ka Wah
Fuleihan, Ramsay L
Haddad, Elie
Loechelt, Brett
Aquino, Victor M
Gillio, Alfred
Davis, Jeffrey
Knutsen, Alan
Smith, Angela R
Moore, Theodore B
Schroeder, Marlis L
Goldman, Frederick D
Connelly, James A
Porteus, Matthew H
Xiang, Qun
Shearer, William T
Fleisher, Thomas A
Kohn, Donald B
Puck, Jennifer M
Notarangelo, Luigi D
Cowan, Morton J
O'Reilly, Richard J
Pai, Sung-Yun
Pai, Sung-Yun
Logan, Brent R
Griffith, Linda M
Buckley, Rebecca H
Parrott, Roberta E
Dvorak, Christopher C
Kapoor, Neena
Hanson, Imelda C
Filipovich, Alexandra H
Jyonouchi, Soma
Sullivan, Kathleen E
Small, Trudy N
Burroughs, Lauri
Skoda-Smith, Suzanne
Haight, Ann E
Grizzle, Audrey
Pulsipher, Michael A
Chan, Ka Wah
Fuleihan, Ramsay L
Haddad, Elie
Loechelt, Brett
Aquino, Victor M
Gillio, Alfred
Davis, Jeffrey
Knutsen, Alan
Smith, Angela R
Moore, Theodore B
Schroeder, Marlis L
Goldman, Frederick D
Connelly, James A
Porteus, Matthew H
Xiang, Qun
Shearer, William T
Fleisher, Thomas A
Kohn, Donald B
Puck, Jennifer M
Notarangelo, Luigi D
Cowan, Morton J
O'Reilly, Richard J
Source :
The New England journal of medicine; vol 371, iss 5, 434-446; 0028-4793
Publication Year :
2014

Abstract

BackgroundThe Primary Immune Deficiency Treatment Consortium was formed to analyze the results of hematopoietic-cell transplantation in children with severe combined immunodeficiency (SCID) and other primary immunodeficiencies. Factors associated with a good transplantation outcome need to be identified in order to design safer and more effective curative therapy, particularly for children with SCID diagnosed at birth.MethodsWe collected data retrospectively from 240 infants with SCID who had received transplants at 25 centers during a 10-year period (2000 through 2009).ResultsSurvival at 5 years, freedom from immunoglobulin substitution, and CD3+ T-cell and IgA recovery were more likely among recipients of grafts from matched sibling donors than among recipients of grafts from alternative donors. However, the survival rate was high regardless of donor type among infants who received transplants at 3.5 months of age or younger (94%) and among older infants without prior infection (90%) or with infection that had resolved (82%). Among actively infected infants without a matched sibling donor, survival was best among recipients of haploidentical T-cell-depleted transplants in the absence of any pretransplantation conditioning. Among survivors, reduced-intensity or myeloablative pretransplantation conditioning was associated with an increased likelihood of a CD3+ T-cell count of more than 1000 per cubic millimeter, freedom from immunoglobulin substitution, and IgA recovery but did not significantly affect CD4+ T-cell recovery or recovery of phytohemagglutinin-induced T-cell proliferation. The genetic subtype of SCID affected the quality of CD3+ T-cell recovery but not survival.ConclusionsTransplants from donors other than matched siblings were associated with excellent survival among infants with SCID identified before the onset of infection. All available graft sources are expected to lead to excellent survival among asymptomatic infants. (Funded by the National Insti

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
The New England journal of medicine; vol 371, iss 5, 434-446; 0028-4793
Notes :
The New England journal of medicine vol 371, iss 5, 434-446 0028-4793
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1367470807
Document Type :
Electronic Resource