A 31-year-old man with primary myelofibrosis initially received low dose Ara C. Splenomegaly decreased but pancytopenia continued. Allogeneic bone marrow transplantation from his sister was then performed. Busulfan and cyclophosphamide were used as a preconditioning regimen, which included neither irradiation nor splenectomy. As the bone marrow was hypoplastic after transplantation, G-CSF was given. It was useful for systemic infection. After transplantation, leukoerythroblastosis and tear drop poikilocytosis disappeared in peripheral blood. Finally, bone marrow fibrosis disappeared and hemopoiesis to normal limits recovered 17 months later. These results demonstrate that bone marrow transplantation is effective for primary myelofibrosis for which there is no otherwise curative therapy.
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