TY - JOUR
T1 - Tolerogenic immunosuppression for organ transplantation
AU - Starzl, Thomas E.
AU - Murase, Noriko
AU - Abu-Elmagd, Kareem
AU - Gray, Edward A.
AU - Shapiro, Ron
AU - Eghtesad, Bijan
AU - Corry, Robert J.
AU - Jordan, Mark L.
AU - Fontes, Paulo
AU - Gayowski, Tim
AU - Bond, Geoffrey
AU - Scantlebury, Velma P.
AU - Potdar, Santosh
AU - Randhawa, Parmjeet
AU - Wu, Tong
AU - Zeevi, Adriana
AU - Nalesnik, Michael A.
AU - Woodward, Jennifer
AU - Marcos, Amadeo
AU - Trucco, Massimo
AU - Demetris, Anthony J.
AU - Fung, John J.
N1 - Funding Information:
We thank Terry L Mangan for administrative and secretarial assistance; Cynthia Eubanks, Anna Marie Rabier, and Cyndi Shelkey of the Transplant Institute Informatics Division, who were responsible for data accrual and collation; Robert J Weber of the School of Pharmacy, who had a role in quality assurance of drugs; Amit Basu, Tom Cacciarelli, David Geller, Ashok Jain, Wallis Marsh, George Mazariegos, Jerry McCauley, Jorge Reyes, Henkie Tan, and Andrew Yeager, who all contributed materially to clinical care; William Rudert, Diana Metes, nurses, and staff of the Transplantation Institute, who provided advice and invaluable assistance throughout. The work was supported by NIH grant DK 29961.
PY - 2003/5/3
Y1 - 2003/5/3
N2 - Background: Insight into the mechanisms of organ engraftment and acquired tolerance has made it possible to facilitate these mechanisms, by tailoring the timing and dosage of immunosuppression in accordance with two therapeutic principles: recipient pretreatment, and minimum use of post-transplant immunosuppression. We aimed to apply these principles in recipients of renal and extrarenal organ transplants. Methods: 82 patients awaiting kidney, liver, pancreas, or intestinal transplantation were pretreated with about 5 mg/kg of a broadly reacting rabbit antithymocyte globulin during several hours. Post-transplant immunosuppression was restricted to tacrolimus unless additional drugs were needed to treat breakthrough rejection. After 4 months, patients on tacrolimus monotherapy were considered for dose-spacing to every other day or longer intervals. Findings: We frequently saw evidence of immune activation in graft biopsy samples, but unless this was associated with graft dysfunction or serious immune destruction, treatment usually was not intensified. Immunosuppression-related morbidity was virtually eliminated. 78 (95%) of 82 patients survived at 1 year and at 13-18 months. Graft survival was 73 (89%) of 82 at 1 year and 72 (88%) of 82 at 13-18 months. Of the 72 recipients with surviving grafts, 43 are on spaced doses of tacrolimus monotherapy: every other day (n=6), three times per week (11), twice per week (15), or once per week (11). Interpretation: The striking ability to wean immunosuppression in these recipients indicates variable induction of tolerance. The simple therapeutic principles are neither drug-specific nor organ-specific. Systematic application of these principles should allow improvements in quality of life and long-term survival after organ transplantation.
AB - Background: Insight into the mechanisms of organ engraftment and acquired tolerance has made it possible to facilitate these mechanisms, by tailoring the timing and dosage of immunosuppression in accordance with two therapeutic principles: recipient pretreatment, and minimum use of post-transplant immunosuppression. We aimed to apply these principles in recipients of renal and extrarenal organ transplants. Methods: 82 patients awaiting kidney, liver, pancreas, or intestinal transplantation were pretreated with about 5 mg/kg of a broadly reacting rabbit antithymocyte globulin during several hours. Post-transplant immunosuppression was restricted to tacrolimus unless additional drugs were needed to treat breakthrough rejection. After 4 months, patients on tacrolimus monotherapy were considered for dose-spacing to every other day or longer intervals. Findings: We frequently saw evidence of immune activation in graft biopsy samples, but unless this was associated with graft dysfunction or serious immune destruction, treatment usually was not intensified. Immunosuppression-related morbidity was virtually eliminated. 78 (95%) of 82 patients survived at 1 year and at 13-18 months. Graft survival was 73 (89%) of 82 at 1 year and 72 (88%) of 82 at 13-18 months. Of the 72 recipients with surviving grafts, 43 are on spaced doses of tacrolimus monotherapy: every other day (n=6), three times per week (11), twice per week (15), or once per week (11). Interpretation: The striking ability to wean immunosuppression in these recipients indicates variable induction of tolerance. The simple therapeutic principles are neither drug-specific nor organ-specific. Systematic application of these principles should allow improvements in quality of life and long-term survival after organ transplantation.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=0038298787&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/S0140-6736(03)13175-3
DO - 10.1016/S0140-6736(03)13175-3
M3 - Article
C2 - 12737859
AN - SCOPUS:0038298787
SN - 0140-6736
VL - 361
SP - 1502
EP - 1510
JO - The Lancet
JF - The Lancet
IS - 9368
ER -