Current concepts in the pathophysiology and treatment of aplastic anemia
National Institutes of Health · National Heart Lung and Blood Institute
Abstract
Aplastic anemia, an unusual hematologic disease, is the paradigm of the human bone marrow failure syndromes. Almost universally fatal just a few decades ago, aplastic anemia can now be cured or ameliorated by stem-cell transplantation or immunosuppressive drug therapy. The pathophysiology is immune mediated in most cases, with activated type 1 cytotoxic T cells implicated. The molecular basis of the aberrant immune response and deficiencies in hematopoietic cells is now being defined genetically; examples are telomere repair gene mutations in the target cells and dysregulated T-cell activation pathways. Immunosuppression with antithymocyte globulins and cyclosporine is effective at restoring blood-cell…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 17.91
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 134
Authors
3Topics & keywords
- Aplastic anemia
- Medicine
- Immunology
- Stem cell
- Transplantation
- Bone marrow failure
- Hematopoietic stem cell transplantation
- Immunosuppression
- Good health and well-being