Monitoring Engraftment Flashcards

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1
Q

Patients undergoing transplant usually receive a myeloablative regimen - why?

A

Designed to deplete malignant cells within the bone marrow, peripheral blood and lymph nodes

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2
Q

Provide some details on donor lymphocyte infusions

A
  • combat recurrence of the disease

- Donor T cells administered to patient post transplant if disease returns

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3
Q

What is chimerism?

A
  • presence of donor cells within the host

- 100% chimerism means no recipient cells can be detected within the compartment under investigation (e.g. Bone marrow)

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4
Q

Initially developed for the field of forensic science, what does the technique of DNA profiling involve?

A
  • Microsatellite regions of DNA within genome incorporate short tandem rpts of DNA sequences, the number of which vary between individuals and can be used as a means of genetic identification
  • Two alleles amplified for each loci. fragments generated are identified by size/fluorescent tag
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5
Q

How is discrimination increased in genetic profiling?

A
  • Increasing number of STR regions amplified
  • Amplifying just one gives low discrimination as chances of another individual sharing same number of repeats is around 1 in 20
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6
Q

How is genetic profiling applied in post transplant assessment of donor engraftment?

A
  • genetic profiling of donor and recipient pre-transplant samples to identify informative alleles
  • single marker then used to measure post-transplant engraftment OR the multiplex can be run (mean derived from multiple values)
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7
Q

How is the percentage donor chimerism worked out through genetic profiling analysis?

A
  • Peak height/area expressed as arbitrary values and can be used to calculate amount of PCR product
  • % donor chimerism = ((donor allele 1 + donor allele 2)/(donor allele 1 + donor allele 2 + recipient allele 1 + recipient allele 2))*100
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8
Q

What are the various types of transplant?

A
  • Sibling allogeneic
  • Haplo-allogeneic
  • Matched unrelated donor
  • Autologous
  • Syngeneic
  • Umbilical cord
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9
Q

What is a sibling allogeneic donor transplant?

A

Donated cells from a sibling

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10
Q

What is a haplo-allogeneic donor transplant?

A

Donated cells from a parent or child who shares half of their inherited alleles with the recipient

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11
Q

What is a matched unrelated donor transplant?

A

Donated cells from an unrelated donor (usually from bone marrow register)

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12
Q

What is an autologous transplant?

A

Uses the patients own cells - harvested when they were in remission

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13
Q

What is a syngeneic donor transplant?

A
  • Donated cells from an identical twin

- Due to the genetic identity between the identical twins this type of transplant is similar in effect to the autologous

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14
Q

What are the advantages of umbilical cord/double cord transplants?

A
  • Uses progenitor cells so they are naive and have very little immunogenicity
  • Means they do not have to be as closely genetically matched to the recipient and would therefore be available to larger number
  • Two cord harvests increases number of cells infused into patient
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15
Q

What are the disadvantages of umbilical cord/double cord transplants?

A
  • Small number of progenitors available within a cord sample
  • Without strong immunological presence, cord donation is less able to fight the leukaemia cells should they return
  • Presence of three DNA profiles following double cord transplant greatly reduces potential of identifying multiple informative alleles for chimerism analysis
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