Prolonged neutropenia resulting from antibodies to neutrophil-specific antigen NB1 following marrow transplantation

1993 
Marrow graft failure is a significant cause of morbidity following bone marrow transplantation. A case is reported of marrow graft failure due to neutrophil antibodies. A 13-year-old girl with a large granular lymphocytosis and chronic neutropenia was treated with granulocyte transfusions prior to undergoing a transplant with bone marrow from a partially matched, unrelated donor. Following the transplant, a bone marrow biopsy showed engraftment of donor myeloid cells, but the recipient remained neutropenic. Testing of the serum for neutrophil antibodies found that the recipient's serum had a high-titer neutrophil antibody. Immunoprecipitation studies using the marrow recipient's serum and 125I surface-labeled neutrophils showed that the antibody reacted to the neutrophil-specific antigen NB1. Phenotyping of neutrophils from the marrow donor found that they expressed NB1 antigen, and, in a crossmatch assay, the recipient's serum reacted with donor neutrophils. Despite treatment with granulocyte-macrophagecolony-stimulating factor, the marrow transplant recipient remained neutropenic and died of polymicrobial sepsis and aspergillosis 38 days after the transplant. The presence of high-titer antibodies to neutrophil-specific antigen NB1 in this patient following transplant likely prevented the recovery of her peripheral blood neutrophils and contributed to her death.
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