Abstract
The clinical, immunological, and serological status of 28 patients with hemophilia A and of 13 patients with hemophilia B was investigated. Thirty-four patients were treated regularly by clotting factor concentrates and 7 patients had been substituted only 1 to 4 times. Almost all patients with severe hemophilia suffered from hepatopathy. No patient had clinical evidence of the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS). Asymptomatic hemophiliacs showed a decreased number of T-helper (OKT 4) cells and an increased number of T-suppressor (OKT 8) cells, which resulted in an inversed OKT 4/OKT 8 cell ratio. Natural killer cell activity of all patients was decreased compared to controls. After culture there was no significant difference of NK cell activity between hemophiliacs and controls. This phenomena was interpreted as a possible maturation defect of NK-cells in vivo. No relationship between immunological alterations and hepatopathy, hepatitis markers, CMV antibodies, amount and source of required factor concentrates, and the kind of hemophilia was observed. IgG immunoglobulins were higher and the OKT 4/OKT 8 ratio lower in the eight patients with lymphadenopathy than in patients without lymphadenopathy. The prevalence of antibodies to human T-lymphotropic virus (HTLVIII) was measured in 35 hemophiliacs and in 25 polytransfused patients, most of whom were suffering from acute leukemia. In 8 of 35 hemophiliacs antibodies to HTLVIII virus were detected by an enzyme linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) and confirmatory tests. All seropositive patients were treated by blood products from the United States. Eight hemophiliacs treated by factor concentrates from German donors only were seronegative. In comparison 2 of 25 examined non-hemophilia patients receiving multiple blood products from local donors were seropositive for HTLVIII. The results show that hemophilia patients treated by imported clotting factor concentrates have a high risk of HTLVIII positivity. Hemophiliacs substituted by blood products obtained by local donor pools have only a small risk of infection. Because non-hemophiliac polytransfused patients had HTLVIII antibodies, there must be asymptomatic virus carriers in the local donor pool. The HTLVIII antibody screening of all donors and the heat treating of factor concentrates will give better therapeutic safety.
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