| Literature DB >> 23889234 |
Kirsty J Thomson1, Karl S Peggs.
Abstract
A number of advances in clinical practice that are considered routine in modern allogeneic transplant programmes lack definitive supporting evidence, partly because they may offer modest incremental benefits that are difficult to demonstrate in a statistically robust manner given the relatively small cohorts of patients who undergo such procedures. Nevertheless, these marginal gains probably contribute therapeutically meaningful overall benefit, particularly when aggregated. We review the evidence for a number of these practices in terms of impact on transplant outcomes, with particular reference to the setting of T cell depletion as widely practiced in the United Kingdom, including high resolution tissue typing, surveillance for and therapy of infectious complications, chimerism-directed immune modulation and more sensitive monitoring for residual or progressive disease.Entities:
Keywords: PET; chimerism; human leucocyte antigen matching; transplantation; viral infection
Mesh:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 23889234 DOI: 10.1111/bjh.12497
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Br J Haematol ISSN: 0007-1048 Impact factor: 6.998