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Hematopoietic reconstitution in a patient with fanconi's anemia by means of umbilical-cord blood from an hla-identical sibling

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TLDR
It is necessary to select patients suitable for vaginal or laparoscopic mesh placement for Fanconi's anemia preoperatively on the basis of prior history and once they provide informed consent for surgery.
Abstract
The clinical manifestations of Fanconi’s anemia, an autosomal recessive disorder, include progressive pancytopenia, a predisposition to neoplasia, and nonhematopoietic developmental anomalies [1-3]. Hypersensitivity to the clastogenic effect of DNA-cross-linking agents such as diepoxybutane acts as a diagnostic indicator of the genotype of Fanconi’s anemia, both prenatally and postnatally [3-6]. Prenatal HLA typing has made it possible to ascertain whether a fetus is HLA-identical to an affected sibling [7]. We report here on hematopoietic reconstitution in a boy with severe Fanconi’s anemia who received cryo-preserved umbilical-cord blood from a sister shown by prenatal testing to be unaffected by the disorder, to have a normal karyotype, and to be HLA-identical to the patient. We used a pretransplantation conditioning procedure developed specifically for the treatment of such patients [8]; this technique makes use of the hypersensitivity of the abnormal cells to alkylating agents that cross-link DNA [9,10] and to irradiation [11] In this case, the availability of cord blood obviated the need for obtaining bone marrow from the infant sibling. This use of cord blood followed the suggestion of one of us that blood retrieved from umbilical cord at delivery, usually discarded, might restore hematopoiesis – a proposal supported by preparatory studies by some of us [12] and consistent with reports on the presence of hematopoietic stem and multipotential (CFU-GEMM), erythroid (BFU-E), and granulocyte-macrophage (CFU-GM) progenitor cells in human umbilical-cord blood (see the references cited by Broxmeyer et al. [12]).

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

The London Cord Blood Bank: analysis of banking and transplantation outcome.

TL;DR: Cord blood units stored at the London Cord Blood Bank, including 59 units transplanted into a high risk and heterogeneous group of patients, were analysed, finding infection was the main cause of transplanted related mortality in these patients.
Journal ArticleDOI

Correction of X-Linked Lymphoproliferative Disease by Transplantation of Cord-Blood Stem Cells

TL;DR: X-linked lymphoproliferative disease is characterized by vulnerability to diseases induced by the Epstein-Barr virus, including life-threatening infectious mononucleosis, hypogammaglobulinemia, aplastic anemia, and B-cell non-Hodgkin's lymphoma, which is uniformly fatal by the age of 40 years.
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Simultaneous cord blood transplantation of ex vivo expanded together with non-expanded cells for high risk leukemia.

TL;DR: The data show that the applicability of ex vivo expanded committed progenitors and LTC-IC, even in high risk leukemia at the time of transplantation, is feasible and can provide sufficient myeloid progenitor resulting in rapid engraftment able to clear bacterial pneumonia and sepsis.
Journal ArticleDOI

Biology of cord blood cells and future prospects for enhanced clinical benefit.

TL;DR: The biology of HSC and HPC, efforts to expand these cells ex vivo for enhanced clinical utility that has thus far not been very successful, and recent studies on attempts to enhance the homing and engrafting capability of H SC as an alternative means for more effective use of the limited numbers of CB cells collected are reviewed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Paracrine molecules of mesenchymal stem cells for hematopoietic stem cell niche.

TL;DR: How MSCs contribute to HSC niche, maintain the stemness and proliferation of HSCs, and support HSC transplantation is discussed.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Progress in Clinical and Biological Research

TL;DR: All with an interest in tumours will find something to stimulate them in this book but even these items are to some extent outweighed by the insight given into the thoughts and policies of this fascinating country.
Journal ArticleDOI

Human umbilical cord blood as a potential source of transplantable hematopoietic stem/progenitor cells

TL;DR: It was determined that granulocyte-macrophage, erythroid, and multipotential progenitor cells remained functionally viable in cord blood untreated except for addition of anticoagulant for at least 3 days at 4 degrees C or 25 degrees C (room temperature), though not at 37 degrees C, implying that these cells could be satisfactorily studied and used or cryopreserved for therapy.
Journal ArticleDOI

Susceptibility of Fanconi's anaemia fibroblasts to chromosome damage by carcinogens

TL;DR: Experiments in which viable FA fibroblasts were exposed to a direct-acting mutagen or carcinogen for a period of 6 d, ensuring chronic exposure of the cells during one or more cell cycles, until increased cell density inhibited further cell division.
Journal ArticleDOI

International Fanconi Anemia Registry: relation of clinical symptoms to diepoxybutane sensitivity.

TL;DR: It is concluded that hypersensitivity to the clastogenic effect of DEB is a useful discriminator for FA and a simplified scoring method for classifying patients on the basis of eight clinical manifestations that are the best predictors for FA is presented.
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