Impact of acute and chronic graft-versus-host disease on human B-cell generation and replication

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Abstract

Using B-cell rearrangement excision circle measurements, we analyzed B-cell reconstitution in a cohort of 243 patients who underwent allogeneic stem cell transplantation. Acute and chronic graft-versus-host disease (aGVHD and cGVHD, respectively) transiently increased B-cell replication but decreased overall B-cell neogenesis with a clear difference in terms of kinetics. Moreover, the impact of aGVHD in the absence of cGVHD was transient, recovering at month 6 similar values as in patients who did not suffer from GVHD. Conversely, impact of cGVHD at month 12 in multivariate analysis was independent of the previous aGVHD effect on B-cell output. Finally, we showed in patients affected with cGVHD a higher B-cell division rate that correlates with an elevated BAFF/CD19+B-cell ratio, supporting a B-cell hyperactivation state in vivo.

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Glauzy, S., Soret, J., Fournier, I., Douay, C., Moins-Teisserenc, H., De Latour, R. P., … Clave, E. (2014). Impact of acute and chronic graft-versus-host disease on human B-cell generation and replication. Blood, 124(15), 2459–2462. https://doi.org/10.1182/blood-2014-05-573303

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