• Ann. Thorac. Surg. · Oct 1995

    Perioperative donor bone marrow infusion augments chimerism in heart and lung transplant recipients.

    • S M Pham, R J Keenan, A S Rao, P A Fontes, R L Kormos, K Abu-Elmagd, A Zeevi, A Kawai, B G Hattler, and R L Hardesty.
    • Pittsburgh Transplantation Institute, Pennsylvania.
    • Ann. Thorac. Surg. 1995 Oct 1; 60 (4): 1015-20.

    BackgroundWe and others have demonstrated that a low level of donor cell chimerism was present for years after transplantation in tissues and peripheral blood of heart and lung recipients; it was associated, in the latter, with a lower incidence of chronic rejection. To augment this phenomenon, we initiated a trial combining simultaneous infusion of donor bone marrow with heart or lung allotransplantation.MethodsBetween September 1993 and January 1995, 15 nonconditioned patients received either heart (n = 10) or lung (n = 5) allografts concurrently with an infusion of unmodified donor bone marrow (3.0 x 10(8) cells/kg), and were maintained on immunosuppressive regimen consisting of tacrolimus and steroids.ResultsThere was no complication associated with the infusion of donor bone marrow. Chimerism was detectable in 73% of bone marrow-augmented patients up to the last sample tested. Of the 5 control recipients who did not receive bone marrow infusion, only 1 had detectable chimerism by flow on postoperative day 15, which dwindled to an undetectable level by postoperative day 36. None of the patients had evidence of donor-specific immune modulation by mixed lymphocyte reaction.ConclusionsThe combined infusion of donor bone marrow and heart or lung transplantation, without preconditioning of the recipient, is safe and is associated with an augmentation of donor cell chimerism.

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