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Public Access Site for Researchers | |
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Campath 1H induction therapy and immunosuppression withdrawal in liver transplant recipients
Principal Investigator: J. Richard Thistlethwaite, University of Chicago, Chicago, IL
Abstract | Investigators
| Background
Abstract
One of the difficult hurdles that must be overcome in order to allow the future implementation and assessment of protocols to induce
immune tolerance in organ transplant recipients is to develop the ability to recognize when an organ transplant recipient is tolerant,
i.e., when immunosuppression can be safely withdrawn without the risk of immune-mediated damage to the transplanted organ.
The
primary objective of the proposed multicenter study is to determine if a specific profile or “fingerprint” can be identified for liver
transplant recipients who are successfully withdrawn from immunosuppression without the occurrence of rejection, based on the
ability of in vitro assays to discriminate between tolerant individuals and those at risk for rejection. Liver transplant recipients are
ideal candidates for this type of empiric drug withdrawal trial because 1. Acute rejection, which may be elicited by drug withdrawal,
is not a significant risk factor for graft loss in liver transplantation, unlike other organ transplants and 2. Preliminary studies suggest
that 20% or more of liver transplant recipients receiving standard immunosuppression can be successfully withdrawn from drugs
without eliciting rejection.
Liver transplant recipients will be treated prospectively with Campath-1H as induction therapy and
tacrolimus as maintenance monotherapy and the tacrolimus slowly withdrawn. Participants will be followed closely by frequent
assessment of their liver function and liver biopsies obtained to diagnose rejection if any liver dysfunction occurs. Participants
developing rejection will be treated and returned to immunosuppression and followed as controls to compare to the participants who
stop immunosuppression and do not reject.
Monitoring assays to be evaluated as to their ability to discriminate participants who do
or do not experience rejection with immunosuppression withdrawal are:
- ELISPOT for enumeration of donor reactive cytokine-producing
T cells,
- cytokine detection using Luminex multianalyte profiling from serum and from donor antigen-stimulated PBL,
- flow
cytometry phenotyping of PBMC,
- measurement of anti-donor HLA antibodies,
- HLA genotype and matching,
- protocol biopsies for
routine histology,
- immunohistochemistry, and
- RNA preparation for gene expression by PCR,
- PBMC RNA preparation for gene
expression by PCR and microarray, and
- SNP analysis for gene polymorphisms.
In evaluating these assays, it is hoped to gain insight
into the mechanism(s) by which immune tolerance is established and maintained in liver transplant recipients, by seeing if it
correlates with defined genetic markers of functional significance, if it has a pattern of specific gene activation and/or down-regulation, and if it is related to a uniquely regulated immune response to donor alloantigens.
Participating
Investigators

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J. Richard Thistlethwaite, University of Chicago, Chicago, IL |
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John Roberts ,
University of California San Francisco, CA |
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John Fung, University of Pittsburgh |
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Stuart Knechtle, University of Wisconsin |
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Jonathan Bromberg, Mount Sinai Medical Center |
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Andy Tzakis, University of Miami |
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Goran Klintmalm, Baylor University Medical Center |
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Jean Emond,Columbia University |
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George Loss, Ochsner Clinic |
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A. Osama Gaber, University of Tennessee |
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Jeff Punch, University of Michigan |
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Michael Millis, University of Chicago, Chicago, IL |
Background
Articles

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Risks and benefits of weaning immunosuppression in liver transplant recipients: long-term follow-up
- Transplantation [PubMed ] |
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Weaning of immunosuppression in living donor liver transplant recipients - Liver Transplant [go ]
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