Abstract

Transfusion-associated graft-versus-host disease (TA-GVHD) has been reported in immunocompetent recipients of nonirradiated cellular blood components from donors who are homozygous for an HLA haplotype shared with the patient. In these cases, donor lymphocytes have no antigens foreign to the recipient, and this similarity in HLA antigens appears important for the development of TA-GVHD. Experience with 65 patients receiving apheresis platelets matched for class I HLA antigens was reviewed to determine the incidence of such a transfusion among HLA-matched, unrelated donor-recipient pairs. In 5 percent of transfusions (31/673), the patient received lymphocytes from a donor exhibiting no antigens foreign to the recipient, but the patient had additional HLA-A or -B antigens not present on donor lymphocytes. Twenty-three percent (n = 15) of patients received at least one such transfusion. In addition, most patients were immunosuppressed as a result of their underlying disease or therapy, which may decrease the degree of antigen matching required to initiate TA-GVHD. Until the pathogenesis of this disease is better understood, it is recommended that the transfusion of an HLA-matched cellular blood component be considered a risk factor for the development of TA-GVHD regardless of the patient's immune status, and that all such blood components be irradiated.

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