Literature DB >> 10982289

Complications after bone marrow transplantation are manifestations of systemic inflammatory response syndrome.

H Takatsuka1, Y Takemoto, S Yamada, H Wada, S Tamura, Y Fujimori, T Okamoto, A Suehiro, A Kanamaru, E Kakishita.   

Abstract

Bone marrow transplantation has been established as a useful treatment for various hematological disorders and is now performed widely, but the mortality rate is still high due to various complications. A clear therapeutic policy for such complications has not yet been established because of their complex nature. We investigated whether the major complications occurring after bone marrow transplantation could be classified as aspects of the systemic inflammatory response syndrome. Subjects were 10 patients who developed severe complications after bone marrow transplantation (graft-versus-host disease, thrombotic microangiopathy, respiratory disorders, and cytomegalovirus interstitial pneumonitis) and 16 patients without complications. Their symptoms, serum cytokines, and factors related to vascular endothelial damage were compared before and after transplantation. Whereas all 10 patients who developed complications had fever in the aplastic phase after transplantation, 15 of the 16 patients without complications remained afebrile (P < 0.001, t-test). When compared with the patients who did not develop complications, the patients with complications also showed significantly higher cytokine levels during the recovery phase after transplantation (P < 0.0001, t-test). Thus, the patients with complications developed fever in the aplastic phase and showed an increase of cytokines during the recovery phase, which triggered the occurrence of vascular endothelial damage shown by factors such as the thrombomodulin and plasminogen activator inhibitor type 1. This sequence of events corresponds with that occurring during systemic inflammatory response syndrome, so many of the complications of bone marrow transplantation can be considered as manifestations of this syndrome.

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Year:  2000        PMID: 10982289     DOI: 10.1038/sj.bmt.1702517

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Bone Marrow Transplant        ISSN: 0268-3369            Impact factor:   5.483


  17 in total

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