Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Contributor
- 1 Rationale for transplantation
- 2 Types of transplantation
- 3 Human leukocyte antigen matching in allogeneic transplantation
- 4 Stem cell source
- 5 Pretransplant evaluation and counseling of patient and donor
- 6 Conditioning regimens
- 7 Stem cell infusion
- 8 ABO compatibility
- 9 Engraftment
- 10 Preventative care
- 11 Transplant-related complications
- 12 Overview of acute and chronic graft-versus-host disease
- 13 Acute graft-versus-host disease and staging
- 14 Graft-versus-host disease prophylactic regimens
- 15 Treatment guidelines for acute graft-versus-host disease
- 16 Chronic graft-versus-host disease
- 17 Engraftment syndrome
- 18 Infectious disease
- 19 Graft rejection and failure
- 20 Gastrointestinal complications
- 21 Oral health in stem cell transplantation
- 22 Pulmonary complications
- 23 Veno-occlusive disease
- 24 Special transfusion-related situations
- 25 Cardiovascular complications
- 26 Neurologic complications
- 27 Cystitis
- 28 Donor lymphocyte infusion
- 29 Transplantation: regulation and accreditation
- Index
- References
19 - Graft rejection and failure
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 November 2013
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Contributor
- 1 Rationale for transplantation
- 2 Types of transplantation
- 3 Human leukocyte antigen matching in allogeneic transplantation
- 4 Stem cell source
- 5 Pretransplant evaluation and counseling of patient and donor
- 6 Conditioning regimens
- 7 Stem cell infusion
- 8 ABO compatibility
- 9 Engraftment
- 10 Preventative care
- 11 Transplant-related complications
- 12 Overview of acute and chronic graft-versus-host disease
- 13 Acute graft-versus-host disease and staging
- 14 Graft-versus-host disease prophylactic regimens
- 15 Treatment guidelines for acute graft-versus-host disease
- 16 Chronic graft-versus-host disease
- 17 Engraftment syndrome
- 18 Infectious disease
- 19 Graft rejection and failure
- 20 Gastrointestinal complications
- 21 Oral health in stem cell transplantation
- 22 Pulmonary complications
- 23 Veno-occlusive disease
- 24 Special transfusion-related situations
- 25 Cardiovascular complications
- 26 Neurologic complications
- 27 Cystitis
- 28 Donor lymphocyte infusion
- 29 Transplantation: regulation and accreditation
- Index
- References
Summary
Graft rejection
Graft rejection refers to the immunologic rejection of donor hematopoietic elements by the residual host immune system. Graft rejection occurs more frequently in patients transplanted for aplastic anemia and in those receiving unrelated or mismatched transplants (because of increased donor–recipient disparity at major and minor HLA loci). Graft rejection may also be observed in reduced-intensity regimens, especially in patients who are not pretreated heavily.
In many patients with aplastic anemia, the underlying pathophysiology reflects an autoimmune recognition of the stem cells by an aberrant immune response. Most conditioning regimens used in aplastic anemia are reduced-intensity regimens. If the conditioning regimen does not fully eliminate the abnormal immune response, the graft may fail by the same mechanism that resulted in aplastic anemia in the first place. Prior to matched related donor transplantation, family member, directed donor transfusions should not be administered to avoid alloimmunization of the patient against minor histocompatibility antigens that are common to other family members.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Manual of Stem Cell and Bone Marrow Transplantation , pp. 121 - 123Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2013