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Antithymocyte Globulin Treatment in Patients with Aplastic Anemia — A Prospective Randomized Trial

List of authors.
  • Richard Champlin, M.D.,
  • Winston Ho, M.D.,
  • and Robert Peter Gale, M.D., Ph.D.

Abstract

We evaluated the efficacy of antithymocyte globulin for the treatment of moderate to severe aplastic anemia in a randomized controlled study. Eleven of 21 patients initially randomized to receive antithymocyte globulin (given intravenously on eight consecutive days) had sustained improvement in hematopoiesis within three months of treatment; none of 21 control patients who received supportive care alone improved (P = 0.0005). Six of 12 control patients who subsequently received antithymocyte globulin improved. Responded had gradual improvement in hematopoiesis, but none recovered completely normal peripheral-blood counts. The severity of bone-marrow failure, age, cause of aplastic anemia, and transfusion history had no apparent bearing on treatment outcome. The interval from diagnosis to antithymocyte globulin treatment correlated inversely with the chance of a treatment response, although this correlation was not statistically significant. These data indicate that antithymocyte globulin is effective in improving hematopoiesis in some patients with aplastic anemia. (N Engl J Med. 1983; 308:113–8.)

Funding and Disclosures

Supported in part by a grant (CA-23175) from the National Cancer Institute. Dr. Champlin is a recipient of a New Investigator Research Award from the National Institute of Arthritis, Diabetes, Digestive and Kidney Diseases. Dr. Gale is a Scholar of the Leukemia Society of America.

We are indebted to Priscilla Ireland and Nancy Lyddane for assistance with data collection and analysis; to John Fahey, Diane Smith, Gail Glick, and the Clinical Immunology Research Laboratory for providing consultation and performing the immune studies; to Janet Welpley for laboratory assistance; to Sharon Berg and Carol Ranselaar for helping to prepare the manuscript; to Dr. M. Ray Mickey and Coralee Yale for statistical consultation; to the physicians and staff of the UCLA Center for the Health Sciences and the Transplantation Biology Unit, including Drs. S. A. Feig, E. Arenson, M. J. Cline, J. Fahey, D. W. Golde, S. Ladisch, G. Sarna, M. C. Territo, D. J. Winston, L. Young, and J. Zighelboim, for providing ongoing medical care for patients participating in this study; and to our professional colleagues who referred their patients to UCLA for this study.

Author Affiliations

From the Transplantation Biology Unit and the Departments of Medicine (Division of Hematology and Oncology) and Microbiology and Immunology (Immunobiology Group), UCLA School of Medicine, Center for the Health Sciences, Los Angeles. Address reprint requests to Dr. Champlin at the Division of Hematology/Oncology, UCLA Center for the Health Sciences, Los Angeles, CA 90024.