Abstract
Hematopoiesis after autologous bone marrow transplantation (BMT) is characterized by a prolonged and severe deficiency of marrow progenitors for several years, especially of erythroid and megakaryocyte progenitors, while the peripheral blood cells and marrow cellularity have reached relatively normal values within a few weeks. These anomalies are comparable to those reported for allogeneic BMT, despite the absence of any allo-immune reaction or post-graft immunosuppressive therapy. Post-graft hematopoietic impairment is the consequence of quantitative and qualitative changes involving both stem cell and stromal compartments which are expressed by an impaired capacity of stem cell self-renewal and commitment towards erythroid and megakaryocytic lineages. Besides the toxicity of conditioning regimens, hematopoietic reconstitution using autologous grafts is particularly dependent on a combination of factors related to the patient, such as underlying disease and pre-graft chemotherapy regimens, and to the graft processing itself, such as in vitro purging with chemotherapeutic agents.