| Literature DB >> 21756538 |
Yuji Hirata1, Koji Kishino, Fumiko Onozaki, Yoko Nakaki, Shin-ichiro Fujiwara, Chizuru Yamamoto, Kazuya Sato, Tomohiro Matsuyama, Katsutoshi Ozaki, Masaki Mori, Keiya Ozawa, Kazuo Muroi.
Abstract
Transplantation with cryopreserved allogeneic peripheral blood stem cells (PBSCs) from related donors is widely conducted in Japan. To freeze PBSCs, a solution containing dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO), which can have various adverse effects, is added. DMSO-depleted allogeneic PBSCs were transplanted into 21 patients. The cryoprotectant was manually removed from thawed PBSCs and the cells were mixed with a solution containing citrate dextrose as an anticoagulant and RPMI-1640 medium. DMSO-depleted PBSCs were immediately infused into patients subjected to conditioning. Infusion-related adverse effects were only observed in three patients. The median neutrophil recovery (⩾0·5×10(9)/l) and platelet recovery (⩾20×10(9)/l) were 13·0 and 14·0 days, respectively. Only one patient with mixed-lineage leukemia in non-complete remission did not show engraftment, likely due to a second transplantation and a two-antigen disparity in human leukocyte antigen system A. The results suggest the removal of DMSO from thawed PBSCs to be safe and useful for transplantation.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21756538 DOI: 10.1179/102453311X13025568941664
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Hematology ISSN: 1024-5332 Impact factor: 2.269