Guest guest Posted December 12, 2005 Report Share Posted December 12, 2005 Group, Just to clarify, I was writing of X-linked SCID BMTs, not all PID BMTs, as I only have experience with X-SCID. X-SCID kids have no working immune system, and therefore require a BMT from a healthy person in order to live. Non-X-SCID PID patients may have partially working immune systems which may respond differently to BMTs. Off all the 13 or so different types of SCID, X-linked SCID is the type least likely to obtain B cell function post-transplant. The better the match between donor's and recipient's Human Leukocyte Antigens (HLA), the more likely it is that the BMT will succeed without major problems. Other PID patients have received BMTs and gained both normal T and B cell function. Every patient is different, and may react differently. There are no guarantees. A bone marrow transplant (BMT) is the transplant of non-embryonic stem cells from a healthy donor into a recipient. X-SCID kids (host), when given a BMT, cannot reject the BMT (graft) because they originally have no working immune system (defense). When Graft Versus Host Disease (GVHD) presents, it is a good sign that the graft is beginning to " take " (work), and that the graft recognizes its host is " foreign " . A little GVH is good, but too much GVH can result in the body's depletion of the host's blood products that are within the host's bone marrow. For reasons too difficult to explain here, although the match was good, in 's case, the GVH was severe, and depleted his bone marrow of its blood products, requiring frequent transfusions. The 2nd BMT saved his life, and we saw his counts rise dramatically in 3-4 days. We saw no GVH from the 2nd BMT. Sorry if this issue has become as clear as mud! Good resources are www.bmtinfonet.org, www.scid.net/hope/, http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/bv.fcgi?rid=gnd.section.153#top, http://content.nejm.org/cgi/content/short/340/7/508. Antipov, mother to , 4 years old, X-SCID, 2 BMTS @ Duke, normal T cell function, SCIG weekly Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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