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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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Journal ArticleDOI

Hematopoietic Stem-Cell Transplantation

TL;DR: Hematopoietic stem-cell transplantation was first conceived more than 50 years ago, but problems associated with transplanting a nonsolid organ and modulating the immune response had to be solved before the procedure could be used clinically as mentioned in this paper.
Journal ArticleDOI

Outcomes among 562 Recipients of Placental-Blood Transplants from Unrelated Donors

TL;DR: Placental blood is a useful source of allogeneic hematopoietic stem cells for bone marrow reconstitution and is associated with the severity of GVHD, type of leukemia, and stage of the disease.
Journal ArticleDOI

Isolation of multipotent mesenchymal stem cells from umbilical cord blood.

TL;DR: Surprisingly, these cells were also able to differentiate into neuroglial- and hepatocyte-like cells under appropriate induction conditions and, thus, they may be more than mesenchymal stem cells as evidenced by their ability to differentiation into cell types of all 3 germ layers.
Journal ArticleDOI

Outcome of cord-blood transplantation from related and unrelated donors

TL;DR: A registry containing information on the outcome of cord-blood transplantation from 1988 to 1996 was established, and younger age, lower weight, transplants from HLA-identical donors, and cytomegalovirus-negative serologic results in the recipient were favorable prognostic factors.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Recipient immune-competent T lymphocytes can survive intensive conditioning for bone marrow transplantation.

TL;DR: It is shown that seven of 14 bone marrow transplant recipients who received intensive conditioning retained circulating T lymphocytes that proliferate after incubation with interleukin 2 and phytohemagglutinin and function as effector cells in an in vitro model of graft rejection.
Journal ArticleDOI

Fanconi Anemia: Prenatal Diagnosis in 30 Fetuses at Risk

TL;DR: In all cases in which tissue was available for study, diagnoses were confirmed by chromosome breakage studies, and this method thus permits reliable detection of Fanconi anemia.
Journal ArticleDOI

An extremely polymorphic locus on the short arm of the human X chromosome with homology to the long arm of the Y chromosome.

TL;DR: A genomic DNA clone named CRI-S232 reveals an array of highly polymorphic restriction fragments on the X chromosome as well as a set of non-polymorphic fragment on the Y chromosome, which may be a recombination and mutation hotspot.
Journal ArticleDOI

Clastogen-induced chromosomal breakage as a marker for first trimester prenatal diagnosis of Fanconi anemia

TL;DR: Using cultured trophoblast cells obtained by chorionic villus biopsy, Fanconi anemia was diagnosed in two pregnancies and excluded it in eight pregnancies at risk for the syndrome.
Journal ArticleDOI

HLA typing used with cultured amniotic and chorionic villus cells for early prenatal diagnosis or parentage testing without one parent's availability

TL;DR: This procedure was used to confirm that an on-going pregnancy had resulted from the successful in vitro fertilization and implantation of an anonymous donor's ovum and could also be of major use in rape or artificial insemination cases when the identity of the possible father(s) is not known.
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