Abstract
Studies on patients for up to one year following allogeneic, HLA-matched bone marrow transplants have shown no increased incidence of salivary Epstein-Barr (EB) virus secretion and no significant rise in EB-virus-specific antibody titers. EB-virus-specific cytotoxic T cells could be detected in the peripheral blood of all patients by six months posttransplant. For up to one year posttransplantation in vitro EB virus infection of peripheral blood B lymphocytes from the majority of patients leads to an abortive infection followed by cell death, and without the establishment of continuously growing cell lines. This abnormality appeared to be due to patients' monocytes, which formed a defective feeder cell layer in culture, and it could be circumvented by culturing the EB-virus-infected B cells from patients on a feeder layer of x-irradiated adherent cells from normal peripheral blood. These findings may explain the relative lack of EB-virus-associated lymphoma seen in bone marrow transplant recipients when compared with other groups of transplant patients.
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