Vinzio S, Lioure B, Grunenberger F, Schlienger J-L, Goichot B
Service de médecine interne et nutrition, hôpital de Hautepierre, avenue Molière, 67098 Strasbourg cedex, France.
Rev Med Interne. 2004 Jul;25(7):514-23. doi: 10.1016/j.revmed.2003.12.019.
Bone marrow transplantation (BMT) is based on destruction of the patient's bone marrow with rescue of haematopoietic stem cells from a donor. Chronic graft-vs-host disease (GVH) is the major complication post-BMT and mimics some autoimmune diseases, such as scleroderma, sicca syndrome, primary biliary cirrhosis and an increased prevalence of various autoantibodies. Other autoimmune-like manifestations have been reported as case reports or short series. The most common are myasthenia gravis, polymyositis, autoimmune cytopenias and Graves' disease or autoimmune hypothyroidism.
These diseases occur mainly in association with chronic GVH. The pathophysiology of chronic GVH and other autoimmune-like diseases post-BMT remains poorly understood. Different mechanisms have been postulated. Most of the autoimmune events (either chronic GVH or more specific diseases) seem to be related to a poor or inadequate immunologic recovery post-BMT with an imbalance between autoregulatory and autoreactive lymphocytes. Microchimerism and molecular mimicry have been recently evocated. A minority of cases (autoimmune thyroid disorders) is attributed to the direct transfer of autoreactive cells from donor to patient (adoptive immunity).
Despite physiopathologic uncertainty, these autoimmune-like disorders post-BMT are an interesting model for primary autoimmune diseases.