DNA-based HLA typing of nonhematopoietic tissue used to select the marrow transplant donor for successful treatment of transfusion-associated graft-versus-host disease.

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RESUMO

Transfusion-associated graft-versus-host disease (TAGVHD) is a rare and usually fatal complication of blood transfusion which can arise when immunocompetent lymphocytes from the donor of a cellular blood product are transfused into a severely immunocompromised recipient. We describe the case of an 8-month-old male with a severe combined immunodeficiency syndrome who developed TAGVHD after receiving an unirradiated transfusion. Serologic HLA typing of the parents, the patient, and the blood donor demonstrated the foreign origin of circulating lymphocytes, confirming the diagnosis of TAGVHD. The manifestations of TAGVHD did not respond to medical immunosuppressive therapy, and bone marrow transplantation was planned to treat the underlying immunodeficiency as well as the TAGVHD. By using DNA-based class I and class II HLA typing, the child's HLA type was determined from nonhematopoietic tissues. This information proved critical in selecting the bone marrow donor. The child received immunosuppression, myeloablation, and a T-depleted, maternal bone marrow graft mismatched at one HLA class II allele. Trilineage hematopoietic engraftment occurred within 3 weeks, and the child remains clinically stable with no evidence of TAGVHD more than 2 years after the transplant. This case illustrates that TAGVHD can be successfully treated by allogeneic bone marrow transplantation and that DNA-based HLA typing can play a unique role in the diagnosis and management of TAGVHD.

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