Quantitation of mafosfamide-resistant pre-colony-forming units in allogeneic bone marrow transplantation: Relationship with rate of engraftment and evidence for long-lasting reduction in stem cell numbers

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Abstract

Current assays of human committed-stem cells are of limited value in predicting the rate of engraftment or in assessing the integrity of the stem cell pool after allogeneic bone marrow (BM) transplantation (BMT). We have used a limiting dilution assay of mafosfamide-resistant progenitors (pre-colony-forming units [CFU]), which are ancestral to committed progenitors such as CFU-granulocyte-macrophage (GM) to analyze the kinetics of myeloid engraftment after BMT and to assess the size of the stem cell pool at intervals up to 66 months thereafter. In 24 patients transplanted for chronic myeloid leukemia in chronic phase (eight with matched unrelated donors and 16 with sibling donors), the rate of neutrophil engraftment correlated strongly with the number of pre-CFU transfused per kilogram recipient body weight (r = .7, P

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Kirkland, M. A., Spencer, A., Davidson, R. J., McDonald, C., & Goldman, J. M. (1996). Quantitation of mafosfamide-resistant pre-colony-forming units in allogeneic bone marrow transplantation: Relationship with rate of engraftment and evidence for long-lasting reduction in stem cell numbers. Blood, 87(9), 3963–3969. https://doi.org/10.1182/blood.v87.9.3963.bloodjournal8793963

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