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Die Transplantation hämatopoetischer Stammzellen: Teil I: Definitionen, prinzipielle Anwendungsmöglichkeiten, Komplikationen

The transplantation of hematopoietic and lymphopoetic stem and progenitor cells has become a standard procedure for the treatment of many malignant diseases. Autologous stem cells are derived from the patient himself, allogeneic cells from an HLA-identical or HLA-compatible family or unrelated donor...

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Autores principales: Link, Hartmut, Kolb, Hans-Jochem, Ebell, Wolfram, Hossfeld, Dieter Kurt, Zander, Axel, Niethammer, Dietrich, Wandt, Hannes, Grosse-Wilde, Hans, Schaefer, Ulrich W.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Urban & Vogel 1997
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7146030/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/9340473
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/BF03044917
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author Link, Hartmut
Kolb, Hans-Jochem
Ebell, Wolfram
Hossfeld, Dieter Kurt
Zander, Axel
Niethammer, Dietrich
Wandt, Hannes
Grosse-Wilde, Hans
Schaefer, Ulrich W.
author_facet Link, Hartmut
Kolb, Hans-Jochem
Ebell, Wolfram
Hossfeld, Dieter Kurt
Zander, Axel
Niethammer, Dietrich
Wandt, Hannes
Grosse-Wilde, Hans
Schaefer, Ulrich W.
author_sort Link, Hartmut
collection PubMed
description The transplantation of hematopoietic and lymphopoetic stem and progenitor cells has become a standard procedure for the treatment of many malignant diseases. Autologous stem cells are derived from the patient himself, allogeneic cells from an HLA-identical or HLA-compatible family or unrelated donor. Hematopoetic stem cells can be obtained from bone marrow, blood and fetal cord blood. After 3 to 5 days treatment, the granulocyte-colony stimulating factor (G-CSF) mobilizes stem- and progenitor cells from the marrow into the blood. This method is now standard in autologous transplantation and is increasingly preferred in allogeneic transplantation. The time to hematopoietic recovery is shorter with blood stem cells than with bone marrow cells. With myeloablative high dose therapy followed by stem cell transplantation, long term disease free survival is possible in many cases and great proportions of patients can be cured (see part II). Improvements of supportive care have reduced toxicity of treatment substantially, however severe complications still occur at oropharynx, gastrointestinal tract, liver, lung, skin, kidney, urinary tract and nervous system. After allogeneic transplantation immunocompetent donor cells can react with the recipients tissue. In HLA-identical donor and recipients differences in the minor histocompatibility antigens account for this graft-versus-host-reaction (GvH), which is mainly mediated by transplanted T-cells. The GvH-reaction can affect skin, liver, gut and other organs and cause clinically relevant GvH-disease (GvHD). The GvHD is more severe in HLA-mis-matched or unrelated transplantations. Immunodeficiency and organ dysfunction due to GvHD may predispose to life threatening infections and impair the outcome of transplantion. Unrelated cord blood stem cells may have a minor risk of inducing acute GvHD, as stem and T-cells are immature. After allogeneic stem cell transplantation, the relapse rate of leukemia or lymphoma is significantly reduced by immunoreactive cells: graft-versus-tumor (GvT) or graftversus-leukemia effect (GvL).
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spelling pubmed-71460302020-04-10 Die Transplantation hämatopoetischer Stammzellen: Teil I: Definitionen, prinzipielle Anwendungsmöglichkeiten, Komplikationen Link, Hartmut Kolb, Hans-Jochem Ebell, Wolfram Hossfeld, Dieter Kurt Zander, Axel Niethammer, Dietrich Wandt, Hannes Grosse-Wilde, Hans Schaefer, Ulrich W. Med Klin Intensivmed Notfmed Übersicht The transplantation of hematopoietic and lymphopoetic stem and progenitor cells has become a standard procedure for the treatment of many malignant diseases. Autologous stem cells are derived from the patient himself, allogeneic cells from an HLA-identical or HLA-compatible family or unrelated donor. Hematopoetic stem cells can be obtained from bone marrow, blood and fetal cord blood. After 3 to 5 days treatment, the granulocyte-colony stimulating factor (G-CSF) mobilizes stem- and progenitor cells from the marrow into the blood. This method is now standard in autologous transplantation and is increasingly preferred in allogeneic transplantation. The time to hematopoietic recovery is shorter with blood stem cells than with bone marrow cells. With myeloablative high dose therapy followed by stem cell transplantation, long term disease free survival is possible in many cases and great proportions of patients can be cured (see part II). Improvements of supportive care have reduced toxicity of treatment substantially, however severe complications still occur at oropharynx, gastrointestinal tract, liver, lung, skin, kidney, urinary tract and nervous system. After allogeneic transplantation immunocompetent donor cells can react with the recipients tissue. In HLA-identical donor and recipients differences in the minor histocompatibility antigens account for this graft-versus-host-reaction (GvH), which is mainly mediated by transplanted T-cells. The GvH-reaction can affect skin, liver, gut and other organs and cause clinically relevant GvH-disease (GvHD). The GvHD is more severe in HLA-mis-matched or unrelated transplantations. Immunodeficiency and organ dysfunction due to GvHD may predispose to life threatening infections and impair the outcome of transplantion. Unrelated cord blood stem cells may have a minor risk of inducing acute GvHD, as stem and T-cells are immature. After allogeneic stem cell transplantation, the relapse rate of leukemia or lymphoma is significantly reduced by immunoreactive cells: graft-versus-tumor (GvT) or graftversus-leukemia effect (GvL). Urban & Vogel 1997-08-01 1997 /pmc/articles/PMC7146030/ /pubmed/9340473 http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/BF03044917 Text en © Urban & Vogel 1997 This article is made available via the PMC Open Access Subset for unrestricted research re-use and secondary analysis in any form or by any means with acknowledgement of the original source. These permissions are granted for the duration of the World Health Organization (WHO) declaration of COVID-19 as a global pandemic.
spellingShingle Übersicht
Link, Hartmut
Kolb, Hans-Jochem
Ebell, Wolfram
Hossfeld, Dieter Kurt
Zander, Axel
Niethammer, Dietrich
Wandt, Hannes
Grosse-Wilde, Hans
Schaefer, Ulrich W.
Die Transplantation hämatopoetischer Stammzellen: Teil I: Definitionen, prinzipielle Anwendungsmöglichkeiten, Komplikationen
title Die Transplantation hämatopoetischer Stammzellen: Teil I: Definitionen, prinzipielle Anwendungsmöglichkeiten, Komplikationen
title_full Die Transplantation hämatopoetischer Stammzellen: Teil I: Definitionen, prinzipielle Anwendungsmöglichkeiten, Komplikationen
title_fullStr Die Transplantation hämatopoetischer Stammzellen: Teil I: Definitionen, prinzipielle Anwendungsmöglichkeiten, Komplikationen
title_full_unstemmed Die Transplantation hämatopoetischer Stammzellen: Teil I: Definitionen, prinzipielle Anwendungsmöglichkeiten, Komplikationen
title_short Die Transplantation hämatopoetischer Stammzellen: Teil I: Definitionen, prinzipielle Anwendungsmöglichkeiten, Komplikationen
title_sort die transplantation hämatopoetischer stammzellen: teil i: definitionen, prinzipielle anwendungsmöglichkeiten, komplikationen
topic Übersicht
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7146030/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/9340473
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/BF03044917
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