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Is Type 1 Diabetes Transmissible by Bone Marrow Allograft?

  1. Michael E. Beard, MD1,
  2. Jinny A. Willis, PHD2,
  3. Russell S. Scott, MD2 and
  4. Jeff W. Nesbit, BSC2
  1. 1Department of Haematology, Christchurch Hospital, Christchurch, New Zealand
  2. 2Lipid and Diabetes Research Group, Hagley Building, Christchurch Hospital, Christchurch, New Zealand

    A review of the medical literature suggests that type 1 diabetes in a bone marrow allograft donor may be transmitted to the recipient after a successful transplant (1,2). We report a 21-year follow-up after a successful allograft for aplastic anemia. The donor had type 1 diabetes at the time of transplant. The recipient has developed a number of antibodies against pancreatic islet cells, and although these have persisted for a number of years, she has not developed diabetes.

    A 6-year-old Caucasian girl presented in 1976 with aplastic anemia. She showed a partial response to androgens, but this was not sustained, and in 1979 she received a bone marrow transplant (BMT) from her HLA-matched male sibling, who was 3 years older and had been diagnosed with type 1 diabetes 7 years earlier. Both patients were group O Rh (D) positive and HLA-A1, -2, -B8, and MLC nonreactive. The transplant procedure and the progress post-BMT have already been published (3). Full donor engraftment of the hemopoietic system has been documented on a number of occasions over the past 21 years. …

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