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Eliane Gluckman

Researcher at University of Paris

Publications -  694
Citations -  48573

Eliane Gluckman is an academic researcher from University of Paris. The author has contributed to research in topics: Transplantation & Bone marrow. The author has an hindex of 112, co-authored 679 publications receiving 46415 citations. Previous affiliations of Eliane Gluckman include Medical College of Wisconsin & Leiden University.

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Multicolor flow cytometry analysis of blood cell subsets in patients given total body irradiation before bone marrow transplantation

TL;DR: Evidence that T and B cell subsets seem to be highly radiosensitive in vivo is provided, to provide clues to the understanding of the pathophysiogeny of radiation-induced aplasia and of the engrafment/rejection process following bone marrow transplantation.
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Umbilical cord blood biology and transplantation.

TL;DR: Early results show that a single cord blood sample provides enough hematopoietic stem cells to provide short- and long-term engraftment, and that the incidence and severity of graft-versus-host disease has been low even in HLA-mismatched transplants.
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Impact of HLA in cord blood transplantation outcomes.

TL;DR: The role of HLA in UCBT setting is described and the ability to use partially HLA‐matched UCB units allows expanding the donor pool and many UCB banks have strategies to increase their inventory including UCB grafts that have rare haplotypes.
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Growth hormone deficiency caused by pituitary stalk interruption in Fanconi’s anemia

TL;DR: Findings suggest a common genetic origin of Fanconi's anemia, which can be associated with growth retardation, and biologic growth hormone deficiency, isolated or associated with thyrotropin abnormality, and pituitary stalk interruption syndrome on magnetic resonance imaging of 5 patients with Fanconi't anemia.

Cord blood banking and transplant in europe

TL;DR: In the absence of a suitable HLA identical sibling donor, alternative donors such as mismatched related or matched unrelated donors are searched as discussed by the authors, which explains the relatively high frequency of post transplant complications, graft failure, graft-versus-host disease and delayed immune reconstitution.