To date, despite an existing regulatory framework and standards, there are no true technical recommendations. A survey of 23 cell processing facilities (France, Belgium and Switzerland) has allowed to overview current practices according to cellular products specifications upon arrival at the facility, with modalities for their preparation prior to cryopreservation, storage, thawing and finally for infusion to patient. Data analysis shows great variability of collected volumes and cell concentrations in cellular products.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Cord blood transplantation is used to treat patients with malignant and nonmalignant hematopoietic diseases. This study assessed the feasibility of collecting cord blood for eventual transplantation to a sibling with such a disease.
Methods: We studied the records of 47 infants from whom cord blood was collected for siblings from 1993 through 1999.
Objective: Donor T cells expressing lymph node homing receptors are the foremost initiators of acute graft-vs-host disease (aGVHD), and a high proportion of CD4(+)CCR7(+) T cells in human leukocyte antigen-matched allografts has been shown to confer a high risk of aGVHD without interfering in other outcomes.
Methods: Naïve, central memory (T(CM)), effector memory (T(EM)), and terminally differentiated effector memory (T(TD)) subsets, further subdivided by CD28 expression, were compared in 52 bone marrow and 37 granulocyte colony-stimulating factor-mobilized peripheral blood harvests.
Results: CCR7(+) cells (naïve and T(CM)) predominated in the CD4(+) population, whereas CD8(+) memory cells were chiefly CCR7(neg) in the grafts.