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Title: Effect of radiation dose on the development of mixed haemopoietic chimerism following T cell-depleted allogeneic bone marrow transplantation. Author: Chalmers EA, Sproul AM, Mills KI, Stewart J, McNee S, Jones R, Barrett A, Simpson E, Gibson BE, Robertson AG. Journal: Bone Marrow Transplant; 1992 Nov; 10(5):425-30. PubMed ID: 1464004. Abstract: The presence of mixed haemopoietic chimerism (MXC) was evaluated by cytogenetic and molecular analysis in 48 patients undergoing T cell-depleted BMT. The dose of total body irradiation (TBI) prescribed to all patients (14.4 Gy) was calculated to compensate for the absence of T cells in the graft. The actual midline dose of TBI received, however, differed significantly depending on the method of TBI administration. Thus, 35 adult patients received an average midline dose of 14.3 Gy, while 13 children received a lower dose of 13 Gy. The incidence of MXC in the adult group, who had received very close to 14.4 Gy to the midline, was 34% (12/35), which is lower than in most reported T cell-depleted series. During follow-up, chimerism remained relatively stable with time but varied between haemopoietic lineages. There was no relationship with relapse. MXC in the 13 children who had received a lower midline TBI dose was significantly higher at 69% (9/13) (p < 0.05) and increased to 90% (9/10) if patients who received additional chemotherapy in their conditioning were excluded (p = 0.001). This suggests that, in terms of marrow ablation, relatively small changes in the dose of TBI may be biologically significant, at least at this dose range. Again, in the lower TBI group MXC was not predictive of relapse.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]