Abstract

Haemopoietic cell transplantation (HCT) with reduced-intensity conditioning (RIC) has been associated with delayed disappearance of host anti-A and anti-B isohaemaglutinins and hindrance of donor erythropoiesis in major ABO mismatched transplants. Erythroid recovery, disappearance of recipient type and appearance of donor-type isohaemaglutinins was compared in 84 patients undergoing RIC and 50 patients with standard-conditioning (SCo) HCT. All patients received alemtuzumab as part of their conditioning. The incidence of immune-mediated anaemia and red cell transfusion usage were also compared. Immune factors affecting post-transplant erythroid kinetics showed little variance between different conditioning regimens. Disappearance of recipient isohaemaglutinins and emergence of donor red cells proceeded at similar rates in RIC and SCo transplants; the effects of ABO mismatch were marginal. Pure red cell aplasia, alloimmune haemolysis and autoimmune haemolytic anaemia were not more common in RIC transplants. We believe that alemtuzumab played a critical role in dampening immune reactions of both the host and the donor. Patients in both conditioning groups had similar post-transplant erythroid burst-forming unit (BFU-E) counts; BFU-E chimaerism analysis showed that 90-100% progenitors were of donor origin. However, transfusion requirements were significantly higher in the SCo group, due at least partly to earlier onset of bone marrow hypoplasia.

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