
Solid Organ Transplantation Research
While the immunosuppressive drugs developed in the past two decades have improved the short-term survival of organ allografts (1), the effects of these regimens on long-term outcome has not yet been determined (2). A significant shortcoming of current anti-rejection therapies is that recipients require life-long treatment on an immunosuppressive regimen and are left at greater risk of serious side effects(1, 3). Thus, it is of paramount importance that tolerance strategies be developed whereby the destructive alloimmune response is stopped, while maintaining general immune competence (4).
There are a number of examples where tolerance is clinical transplantation has been shown to exist. A small fraction of patients who have terminated their maintenance immunosuppression seem to maintain a functioning graft (5). The ITN is currently conducting tolerance assay studies in one such cohort of liver transplant patients and will begin compiling a list of similar kidney transplant recipients in the near future. In addition, techniques using induction therapy with whole body radiation (6, 7) and those first receiving bone marrow transplants with kidneys from the same donor appear to have induced an operational tolerance(8, 9). The ITN is also actively investigating these methods in current trials.
Current areas of emphasis are as follows:
1) IMMUNOSUPPRESSIVE DRUG WITHDRAWAL Biomarkers for successful immunosuppression
withdrawal
The initial goal of studies in liver and kidney transplantation
is the reduction or elimination of use of long-term maintenance
immunosuppression, in order to alleviate its associated
complications and high costs. The Network is currently
supporting studies aimed at developing and validating
assays to predict the outcome of immunosuppression withdrawal
and the ultimate establishment of tolerance. This involves
the identification of that group of patients who maintain
functional liver and kidney grafts despite discontinuation
of all immunosuppressive therapy.
2) NOVEL IMMUNOTHERAPEUTIC STRATEGIES IN CONJUNCTION WITH CALCINEURIN-INHIBITOR-FREE PROTOCOLS
The Network aims to test potential tolerance induction strategies that do not
include calcineurin inhibitors, against a backdrop of
immunosuppression in both kidney and liver transplantation.
As surrogate markers are identified via collaborative
efforts with the Tolerance Assay Subgroup, further withdrawl
of immunosuppression is anticipated. Novel immunotherapeutic
agents which have shown promise are of great interest
to the Network, especially in unique combinations:
- Blockade of TCR/Co-receptor Signals
- Blockade of Accessory/Costimulatory Signals
3) THERAPEUTIC ESTABLISHMENT OF HEMATOPOIETIC CHIMERISM
The ITN places a high emphasis on studies designed to promote donor hematopoietic
engraftment independent of the use of irradiation or
depletion. Those strategies involving appropriate combination
treatments with inductive T-cell directed therapy, higher
doses and costimulatory blockade, as a means of eliminating
the need for recipient radiation conditioning, are of
significant interest to the Network. Several studies
examining mixed chimeric approaches to tolerance are
currently under investigation.
References
1. Denton, MD, Magee, CC, Sayegh, HH. Immunosupressive
strategies in transplantation. Lancet 353: 1083-1091,
1999.
2. Womer, KL, Vella, JP, Sayegh, MH. Chronic allograft dysfunction: mechanisms and new approaches to therapy. Semin Nephrol 220: 126-147, 2000.
3. Kasiske BL, Chakkera HA, Roel J. Explained and unexplained iscaemic heart disease risk after renal transplantation. J Am Soc Nephrol 11: 1735-43, 2000. [Full Text]
4. Suthanthiran M. Transplantation tolerance: Fooling mother nature. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 93: 12072-5, 1996. [Full Text] (pdf)
5. Burlingham, WJ et al. Microchimerism linked to cytotoxic T lymphocyte functional unresponsiveness (clonal anergy) in a tolerant renal transplant recipient. Transplantation 59: 1147-55, 1995.
6. Strober, S et al. Clinical transplantation tolerance twelve years after prospective withdrawal of immunosuppressive drugs: studies of chimerism and anti-donor activity. Transplantation 69: 1549-54, 2000. [Full Text] (pdf)
7. Strober, S et al. Acquired immune tolerance to cadaveric renal allografts. A study of three patients treated with total lymphoid irradiation. N Engl J Med 321: 28-33, 1989.
8. Sayegh, MH et al. Immunologic tolerance to renal alografts after bone marrow transplants from the same donor. Ann Intern Med 114: 954-5, 1991.
9. Spitzer TR et al. Combined histocompatibility leukocyte antigen-matched donor bone marrow and renal transplantation for multiple myeloma with end stage renal disease: the induction of allograft tolerance through mixed lymphohematopoietic chimerism. Transplantation 68: 480-4, 1999. [Full Text] (pdf)
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