I've talked to Dr. Sodani, and these are his answers:
1) "Has this method been continued by Dr Sodani, and if so, what is the current success rate?"
Thalassemia free is 70%,rejection 23% and mortality 7%. The best results are with very young patients.
The most recent scientific paper has been published on June 2011:
Pediatric Reports:T cell-depleted hla-haploidentical stem cell transplantation in thalassemia young patients
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22053275The first preliminary results were published on Blood Journal on November 2009:
Blood Journal:Purified T-depleted,CD34+ peripheral blood and bone marrow cell transplantation from haploidentical mother to child with thalassemia
http://bloodjournal.hematologylibrary.org/content/115/6/1296.abstract2) "In 2006, Dr Sodani explained that there was no clear explanation why a mother to child BMT would work, but he speculated on a possible reason. Has the science advanced? Does Dr Sodani have a better understanding of why this process works for patients than he did in 2006?"
The scientifc explanation is in the Blood Paper that I have mentioned above. Anyway, you can read it in this paper written by T.
Ichinohe, one of the most famous experts of feto-maternal microchimerism:
Long-term feto-maternal microchimerism revisited: Microchimerism and tolerance in hematopoietic stem cell transplantation.
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21327150#For your convenience, I paste it here:
Bidirectional fetal-maternal cell traffic during pregnancy gives rise to stable persistence of minute amounts of allogeneic cells both in the mother and in her offspring, a phenomenon called long-term fetal or maternal microchimerism. Over the past decade, increasing attention has been devoted to elucidating the biological relevance of such reciprocal microchimerism, unveiling its conflicting roles in either immune sensitization or tolerance induction against fetal or maternal alloantigens. Recent studies in mice and humans have highlighted the significance of fetal-maternal microchimerism in the induction and maintenance of CD4(+)CD25(+) and CD8(+) T regulatory cells that counterbalance the immune responses to fetal or maternal antigens mediated by T effector cells. Consistent with these observations, T-cell-replete hematopoietic stem cell transplantation between mutually microchimeric mothers and their HLA-haploidentical offspring has been shown to be feasible, although the degree of microchimerism-associated tolerance appears to substantially differ among the cases.
Since in vitro or trans-vivo assays to detect antigen-specific tolerance in the context of the T regulator versus T effector balance are now available, future clinical studies incorporating these tests into the criteria for donor selection are warranted to more precisely define the relevance of fetal-maternal microchimerism in allotolerance and immune homeostasis after hematopoietic stem cell transplantation
He has also published a paper on Blood about this topic
Fetal tolerance to maternal antigens improves the outcome of allogeneic bone marrow transplantation by a CD4+ CD25+ T-cell-dependent mechanism.
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/16150938JJ
van Rood, a great expert in BMT applied to different diseases has also published a paper on this topic:
The effect of noninherited maternal antigens in allogeneic transplantation.
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/15846576Please notice that Prof. Lucarelli started doing haploidentical mismatch transplants using the mother for patients in advanced leukemia. These are the 2 scientific papers published on Bone Marrow Transplantations:
1991
Mother as HLA haploidentical marrow donor for children with advanced leukemia.
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18786711995
Haploidentical bone marrow transplantation from mother to child with advanced leukemia
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/8528168When in 2002 Prof. Lucarelli and Dr. Sodani started doing Haploidentical bone marrow transplantation from mother to child with thalassemia , they already had 10 years of experience using the mother as haploidentical donor.
Another important fact that we want to emphasize is that the Blood paper of Dr. Sodani has been officially positively commented on another Blood paper written by
Ann Woolfrey, who works in the most famous BMT center in the world, the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center in Seattle:
Blood: Breaking barriers
http://bloodjournal.hematologylibrary.org/content/115/6/1112.fullAn excerpt of the abstract:
Finally, selection of a maternal donor exploited the potential for feto-maternal microchimerism to induce immunologic tolerance. Taken altogether, these strategies allowed utilization of a relatively conventional regimen that did not contain total body irradiation. Although not perfect, the results are extremely promising—a reasonably small risk for mortality with a reasonably high rate of engraftment. Among patients who did not achieve full donor chimerism, disease symptoms were ameliorated in those with mixed donor-host chimerism and autologous hematopoiesis resumed in those who rejected their graft.
The fact that these results were obtained in a group of mostly class 2 to 3 thalassemia patients is even more remarkable.