Abstract

A group of 56 patients with immunophenotyped acute lymphoblastic leukemia had their bone marrow purged using monoclonal antibody (MAb) and complement. Mononuclear marrow cells were treated with panels of MAb directed against T cells (n = 19), CD10-CALLA (n = 16), and B cells (n = 21), resulting in median specific cell depletions of 96.50, 97.59, and 96.97%, respectively. The resulting CFU-GM recoveries were 60.15, 110.6, and 72.9%. Long-term bone marrow cultures showed normal formation of adherent cell layers in 17 of 23 cases, and failure to form an adherent layer correlated with poor hematological reconstitution. A total of 32 patients (aged 4-40 years) received purged marrow grafts containing a median of 1.32 x 10(7) mononuclear cells/kg and 1.64 x 10(4) CFU-GM/kg; 7 patients required backup marrow. Time to engraftment of 500 granulocytes, 1000 leukocytes, 20,000 platelets, and 50,000 platelets was 37, 38, 39, and 57 days, respectively. A total of 16 patients (50%) remain alive and in complete remission 313-913 days posttransplant (median 565 days); 13 patients (41%) relapsed between 50 and 365 days posttransplant (median 100 days), and 3 patients (9%) died from transplant-associated complications.

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