Treatment of aplastic anaemia with antilymphocyte globulin (ALG)

Abstract
Patients (31) with aplastic anemia were treated with antilymphocyte globulin (ALG) followed by anabolic steroids. All patients were reviewed at least 1 yr after receiving treatment. Twenty-one patients were considered to have a severe form of aplasia. ALG from 3 sources was used during the trial. Sixteen patients were alive at the time of analysis, 8 who had had severe aplastic anemia (38%) and 5 of these no longer require blood support. No difference in response was found according to type of ALG used. Patients with a long history of aplasia before treatment fared worse than those with a short history. These results were better than those obtained with anabolic steroids alone in historical controls. Evidently, ALG treatment is worth giving to patients with aplastic anemia but, the optimum way of giving this immunosuppression may be different from that used in this presentation.