Haematologica (Oct 2010)

Role of reduced intensity conditioning in T-cell and B-cell immune reconstitution after HLA-identical bone marrow transplantation in ADA-SCID

  • Caterina Cancrini,
  • Francesca Ferrua,
  • Alessia Scarselli,
  • Immacolata Brigida,
  • Maria Luisa Romiti,
  • Graziano Barera,
  • Andrea Finocchi,
  • Maria Grazia Roncarolo,
  • Maurizio Caniglia,
  • Alessandro Aiuti

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3324/haematol.2010.025098
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 95, no. 10

Abstract

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The treatment of choice for severe combined immunodeficiency is bone marrow transplantation from an HLA-identical donor sibling without conditioning. However, this may result in low donor stem cell chimerism, leading to reduced long-term immune reconstitution. We compared engraftment, metabolic, and T-cell and B-cell immune reconstitution of HLA-identical sibling bone marrow transplantation performed in 2 severe combined immunodeficiency infants with adenosine deaminase deficiency from the same family treated with or without a reduced intensity conditioning regimen (busulfan/fludarabine). Only the patient who received conditioning showed a stable mixed chimerism in all lineages, including bone marrow myeloid and B cells. The use of conditioning resulted in higher thymus-derived naïve T cells and T-cell receptor excision circles, normalization of the T-cell repertoire, and faster and complete B-cell and metabolic reconstitution. These results suggest the utility of exploring the use of reduced intensity conditioning in bone marrow transplantation from HLA-identical donor in severe combined immunodeficiency to improve long-term immune reconstitution.