Friedrich W, Goldmann S F, Vetter U, Fliedner T M, Heymer B, Peter H H, Reisner Y, Kleihauer E
Lancet. 1984 Apr 7;1(8380):761-4. doi: 10.1016/s0140-6736(84)91277-7.
Immunological reconstitution by transplantation of HLA-haploidentical, paternal bone marrow was attempted in four infants with severe combined immunodeficiency who lacked HLA-identical donors. To prevent graft-versus-host disease, T lymphocytes were removed from the grafts by agglutination with soybean agglutinin and rosette formation with sheep red blood cells. None of the patients received conditioning treatment before transplantation. Normal, donor-derived cellular immune functions developed in all four patients within several months of transplantation. Threatening complications of graft-versus-host reactions were not seen. All four patients remain in excellent health 12-15 months after discharge home, with persisting normal T-cell functions.