Clonable T lymphocytes in T cell-depleted bone marrow transplants correlate with development of graft-v-host disease

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Abstract

Early clinical trials using T lymphocyte-depleted human marrow for transplantation have reported that such grafts reduce, to varying degrees, both the incidence and the severity of graft-v-host disease (GVHD). However, to date, no clear estimates have been made as to what degree of T cell depletion is necessary to prevent GVHD in every case. To address this problem, we used a limiting dilution assay (LDA) to quantitate residual clonable T lymphocytes in human T cell-depleted bone marrow in 31 HLA-identical transplants for leukemia. The number of phytohemagglutinin-interleukin 2-responsive T lymphocytes determined by LDA and expressed as T cell per kilogram recipient weight was found to correlate with the subsequent development of GVHD: no patients who received less than 1 x 105 T cell per kilogram developed GVHD (N = 24). Of the seven patients who received 1 x 105 to 4.4 x 105 T cell per kilogram, four patients developed grade I or II skin GVHD. This study thus provides a quantitative estimate of the number of T lymphocytes necessary to initiate clinically detectable GVHD in an HLA-identical host.

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Kernan, N. A., Collins, N. H., Juliano, L., Cartagena, T., Dupont, B., & O’Reilly, R. J. (1986). Clonable T lymphocytes in T cell-depleted bone marrow transplants correlate with development of graft-v-host disease. Blood, 68(3), 770–773. https://doi.org/10.1182/blood.v68.3.770.bloodjournal683770

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