Growing attention has been focused on cord blood as a source of transplantable hematopoietic stem cells. However, clinical experience is rather limited. In this study we describe a child with advanced acute lymphoblastic leukemia who received an HLA-haploidentical cord blood transplant. The patient was transplanted in third complete remission after conditioning with fractionated total body irradiation, thiotepa and cyclophosphamide. Forty-one milliliters of cryopreserved umbilical cord blood, containing 0.15 x 10(8) nucleated cells/kg and 0.25 x 10(4) CFU-GM/kg, were infused. Cyclosporine and prednisone were administered for graft-versus-host disease (GVHD) prophylaxis. The patient received G-CSF from day +1 to day +35, but no improvement in granulocyte counts was observed. Therefore, administration of GM-CSF was started on day +36 to day +59, which resulted in a significant increase in white blood cells and granulocyte counts. Sustained myeloid engraftment was evidenced by a granulocyte count > 0.5 x 10(9)/l by day +41. The presence of donor-derived cells could be documented in the peripheral blood and bone marrow of the patient by cytogenetic analysis, HLA phenotyping and DNA studies. Forty-one days after transplant, clonogenic bone marrow assays showed the presence of low frequencies of primitive hematopoietic progenitor cells (BFU-E = 19/10(5) and CFU-GM = 8/10(5)). The chimerism was complete and no host-derived cells could be detected. However, the engraftment was restricted to the myeloid lineage whereas lymphoid and megakaryocytic engraftments were inadequate. The immunophenotype of the patient's peripheral blood showed the presence of T lymphocytes expressing an immature phenotype (CD2+ CD3-) at day +21.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)