Abstract:
South Africa has more than 8 million people living with HIV. However, the number of patients undergoing haematopoietic stem-cell transplantation (HSCT) in South Africa is far below the target number. Donor numbers are insufficient to meet demand. Both HSCT and solid organ transplantation have proved successful in people living with HIV. Solid organ transplantation also has good outcomes when both donors and recipients have HIV. This Personal View explores the possible inclusion of people living with HIV and umbilical cord blood from HIV-negative infants exposed to HIV as donor sources for HSCT. Beyond the risk of HIV transmission, additional complications must be considered, such as delayed or inadequate immune reconstitution and an increased risk of haematological abnormalities and malignancies. Interactions between antiretroviral drugs and drugs used in the conditioning regimen, as well as the need to maintain virological suppression when gastrointestinal absorption deteriorates, are additional complicating factors. The process also requires more stringent ethical processes to be in place to minimise physical and emotional harm. However, in an HIV endemic country, people living with HIV or donors exposed to HIV must be considered as part of a multidisciplinary collaborative effort to provide more patients with the opportunity to have a life-saving HSCT.