72 research outputs found
A Case of Crohn's Disease with Improvement after Azathioprine-Induced Pancytopenia
The immunosuppressant azathioprine (AZA) is widely used in the treatment of inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) for both inducing and maintaining remission. However, the adverse effects of AZA can often necessitate a dose reduction or discontinuation. Bone marrow suppression is one of the most serious complications with AZA treatment. On the other hand, some reports have suggested that neutropenia during AZA therapy reduced the relapse rates of IBD patients, and there have been some cases where eradication of the sensitized leukocytes by leukapheresis or bone marrow transplantation improved the IBD, which may explain the relevant role of neutropenia in controlling disease activity. This report describes the case of a 22-year-old male patient who had Crohn's colitis and complicated perianal fistulas that required immunosuppression; he achieved endoscopically determined remission and showed accelerated mucosal healing as well as clinical remission following the AZA-induced pancytopenia
How to manage the transplant question in myelofibrosis
Allogeneic stem cell transplantation remains the only curative therapy for myelofibrosis. Despite advances in transplant, the morbidity and the mortality of the procedure necessitate careful patient selection. In this manuscript, we describe the new prognostic scoring system to help select appropriate patients for transplant and less aggressive therapies. We explore the advances in non-transplant therapy, such as with investigational agents. We review the blossoming literature on results of myeloablative, reduced intensity and alternative donor transplantation. Finally, we make recommendations for which patients are most likely to benefit from transplantation
CpG-ODN and MPLA Prevent Mortality in a Murine Model of Post-Hemorrhage-Staphyloccocus aureus Pneumonia
Infections are the most frequent cause of complications in trauma patients. Post-traumatic immune suppression (IS) exposes patients to pneumonia (PN). The main pathogen involved in PN is Methicillin Susceptible Staphylococcus aureus (MSSA). Dendritic cells () may be centrally involved in the IS. We assessed the consequences of hemorrhage on pneumonia outcomes and investigated its consequences on DCs functions. A murine model of hemorrhagic shock with a subsequent MSSA pneumonia was used. Hemorrhage decreased the survival rate of infected mice, increased systemic dissemination of sepsis and worsened inflammatory lung lesions. The mRNA expression of Tumor Necrosis Factor-alpha (TNF-α), Interferon-beta (IFN-β) and Interleukin (IL)-12p40 were mitigated for hemorrhaged-mice. The effects of hemorrhage on subsequent PN were apparent on the pDCs phenotype (reduced MHC class II, CD80, and CD86 molecule membrane expression). In addition, hemorrhage dramatically decreased CD8+ cDCs- and CD8- cDCs-induced allogeneic T-cell proliferation during PN compared with mice that did not undergo hemorrhage. In conclusion, hemorrhage increased morbidity and mortality associated with PN; induced severe phenotypic disturbances of the pDCs subset and functional alterations of the cDCs subset. After hemorrhage, a preventive treatment with CpG-ODN or Monophosphoryl Lipid A increased transcriptional activity in DCs (TNF-α, IFN-β and IL-12p40) and decreased mortality of post-hemorrhage MSSA pneumonia
Dissecting Inflammatory Complications in Critically Injured Patients by Within-Patient Gene Expression Changes: A Longitudinal Clinical Genomics Study
By studying gene expression changes over time in a cohort of trauma patients, Keyur Desai and colleagues identify genes and pathways strongly associated with longer-term complications, which could lead to improved outcome prediction in the first 80 hours after injury
Dynamics of bone marrow changes in patients with chronic idiopathic myelofibrosis following allogeneic stem cell transplantation
Scant knowledge exists about the dynamics
of fibro-osteosclerotic bone marrow (BM) lesions and
regeneration of hematopoiesis following allogeneic
peripheral stem cell transplantation (SCT) in chronic
idiopathic myelofibrosis. Therefore, an immunohistochemical
and morphometric study was performed on
BM biopsies in 20 patients before and at standardized
intervals (days 30 through 384) following SCT. In
responding patients, a total regression of the
pretransplant increased fibrosis was completed in the
posttransplant period after about six months, while the
extent of osteosclerosis did not change significantly
during observation time. The quantity of CD61+
megakaryocytes including precursors was strikingly
variable after SCT and, by using planimetric methods,
atypical microforms exhibiting a dysplastic aspect could
be demonstrated. These anomalies may be responsible
for posttransplant thrombocytopenia. CD34+ progenitor
cells were increased before transplantation, however,
their number declined rapidly to normal values in
responding patients. Nucleated erythroid precursors
revealed a decreased amount before and after SCT
accounting for anemia. Large clusters of this cell lineage
indicated an initial hematopoietic reconstitution
comparable with the expansion of the neutrophil
granulopoiesis. Proliferative activity and apoptosis
showed an increase until one year after SCT that implied
a still regenerating hematopoiesis in keeping with an
enhanced cell turnover
Dualism of mixed chimerism between hematopoiesis and stroma in chronic idiopathic myelofibrosis after allogeneic stem cell transplantation
Scant knowledge exists concerning lineagerestricted
mixed chimerism (mCh) after allogeneic
peripheral blood stem cell transplantation (PSCT) in
patients with chronic idiopathic myelofibrosis (CIMF).
Following a sex-mismatched PSCT, a combined
immunopheno- and genotyping by fluorescence in-situ
hybridization (FISH) was performed on sequential bone
marrow (BM) biopsies at standardized intervals. Results
were compared with PCR analysis of corresponding
peripheral blood samples in five patients. According to
FISH, pretransplant specimens revealed a gender
congruence of more than 99%, while in the first three
months the total BM exhibited a persistent fraction of
host cells (30% to 40%) with a tendency to decline after
about one year. It is noteworthy that the majority of
endothelial cells maintained a recipient origin, whereas
CD34+ progenitors and especially CD61+ megakaryocytes
exhibited only very few host-derived cells. In
keeping with the prevalence of donor cells in the
hematopoietic compartment, PCR analysis of peripheral
blood cells displayed a non-significant degree of mCh.
In conclusion, according to FISH and PCR analysis,
successful PSCT in CIMF results in an almost complete
chimeric (donor-derived) state of the hematopoietic cell
population. The non-transplantable stromal compartment
includes the vascular endothelium with a predominance
of recipient cells. The minimal mCh of this population
implies probably a donor-derived origin (endothelial
progenitor cells)
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