Review Articles
Vol. 1 No. 1 (2009): Progress in Diagnosis and Therapy of Thalassemia and Hemoglobinopathies

HEMATOPOIETIC STEM CELL TRNSPLANTATION IN THALASSEMIA AND RELATED DISORDERS

Publisher's note
All claims expressed in this article are solely those of the authors and do not necessarily represent those of their affiliated organizations, or those of the publisher, the editors and the reviewers. Any product that may be evaluated in this article or claim that may be made by its manufacturer is not guaranteed or endorsed by the publisher.
5323
Views
480
Downloads
3946
HTML
Hematopietic Stem Cell Transplantation in Thalassemia and Related Disorders

Authors

The   basis of allogeneic hemopoietic stem cell (HSC) transplantation in thalassemia consists in substituting the ineffective thalassemic erythropoiesis with and allogeneic effective one. This approach is an efficient way to obtain a long lasting, probably permanent, clinical effective correction of the anaemia avoiding transfusion requirement and subsequent complications like iron overload.   The first HSC transplant for thalassemia was performed in Seattle on Dec 2, 1981. In the early eighties transplantation procedure was limited to very few centres worldwide. Subsequently between 17 December 1981 and 31 January 2003, over  1000 consecutive patients, aged from 1 to 35 years, underwent transplantation in Pesaro. After the  pioneering work by the Seattle  and Peasaro groups,  this therapeutic approach is now widely applied worldwide.

Medical therapy of thalassemia is one of the most spectacular successes of the medical practice in the last decades. In recent years advances in knowledge of iron overload patho-physiopathology, improvement and diffusion of diagnostic capability together with the development of new effective and safe oral chelators  promise to further increase success of medical therapy. Nevertheless situation is dramatically different in non-industrialized countries were the very large majority of patients live today . Transplantation technologies have improved substantially during the last years and transplantation outcome is likely to be much better today than in the ‘80s. Recent data indicated a probability of overall survival and thalassemia free survival of 97% and 89% for patients with no advanced disease and of 87% and 80% for patients with advanced disease.  Thus the central role of HSC in thalassemia has now been fully established. Thalassemia remains the only definitive curative therapy for thalassemia and other hemoblobinopathies. The development of oral chelators has not changed this position. However this has not settled the controversy on how this curative but potentially lethal treatment stands in front of medical therapy for adults and advanced disease patients. In  sickle cell disease  HSC transplantation currently is reserved almost exclusively for patients with clinical features that indicate a poor outcome or significant sickle-related morbidity.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

Citations

Ethics Approval

Review
Emanuele Angelucci, Ospedale Oncologico di Riferimento Regionale “Armando Businco” Cagliari
Director Struttura Complessa Disciplina di Ematologia e Centro Trapianto Cellule Staminali Emopoietiche “Wilma Deplano”. Ospedale Oncologico di Riferimento Regionale “Armando Businco”  Cagliari. 
Martina Pettinau
,
Cristina Depau
 
Claudia Cogoni
,

How to Cite



“HEMATOPOIETIC STEM CELL TRNSPLANTATION IN THALASSEMIA AND RELATED DISORDERS” (2009) Mediterranean Journal of Hematology and Infectious Diseases, 1(1), p. e2009015. Available at: https://www.mjhid.org/mjhid/article/view/2009.015 (Accessed: 24 May 2026).