Rogue cell: An electron micrograph image shows a cancerous white blood cell from a patient with acute myeloid leukemia.
Andrejs Liepins / Photo Researchers

Biomedicine

Calming Cells Fend Off Immune Attack

Novel technique helps with bone marrow transplants for leukemia patients.

  • Friday, December 11, 2009
  • By Michael Day

A transplant of healthy bone marrow stem cells may be the only hope for many patients with acute myeloid leukemia, a cancer affecting the production of healthy white blood cells. But after cancerous cells and a patient's immune system have both been knocked out by radiation and chemotherapy, rebuilding that person's immune capacity is a delicate, and potentially deadly, balancing act.

Mature donor immune cells provide short-term protection in the weeks after the operation. But these immune cells can also attack the host's body, causing deadly graft-versus-host (GVH) disease. Now a novel way of preventing this reaction in bone marrow recipients, while protecting them from dangerous infections, has been developed by Italian and Israeli scientists.

The key is adding special immune-calming cells to the transplant material to prevent the donor immune cells from attacking the host, without compromising their ability to fight off dangerous infections. The researchers behind the work presented their findings this week at the Annual Meeting of the American Society of Hematology in New Orleans.

The problem of GVH disease is aggravated by the fact most transplants are provided by partially matched donors, because perfect matches--those with compatible proteins, called human leukocyte antigens--are usually unavailable.

Advertisement

When a patient and donor are not perfectly matched, high doses of stem cells, which mature into immune cells, can overcome rejection. The principle has been successfully pioneered in animal models by the coauthor of the new study, Yair Reisner of the Weizmann Institute of Science in Rehovot, Israel.

Following successful work in mice, Reisner joined forces with researchers at University of Perugia, Italy, to test the approach in more than 300 patients. The success rate for these partially matched transplants was found to be similar to that of transplants from matched donors picked from international bone marrow donor registries. To reduce the risk of GVH, mature immune T-cells have to be removed, meaning that post-transplant levels of life-threatening infection are high.

In the latest study, the Italian researchers infused 28 leukemia patients with a type of regulatory immune cell called CD4/CD25+ that had been selected from the donors' own blood. These cells lessen T-cells' tendency to attack host tissue, and have been shown to prevent GVH in animal studies. The "calming" immune cells have also been shown to keep other immune responses in check, including autoimmune attacks on the body's own cells, but without hindering immune cells' ability to fight infection.

Print
Advertisement

MAGAZINE

Iridescent Displays

Qualcomm uses the ­mechanism that gives color to butterfly wings to make low-power, full-color e-reader displays.

Videos

The Virtual Nurse Will See You Now

More

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement