Donor-specific tolerance induction in composite tissue allografts

1998 ◽  
Vol 176 (5) ◽  
pp. 418-421 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert D Foster ◽  
Larry Fan ◽  
Michael Niepp ◽  
Christina Kaufman ◽  
Timothy McCalmont ◽  
...  
Blood ◽  
2011 ◽  
Vol 118 (21) ◽  
pp. 832-832
Author(s):  
Joseph Leventhal ◽  
Michael Abecassis ◽  
Joshua Miller ◽  
Lorenzo Gallon ◽  
Kadiyala Ravindra ◽  
...  

Abstract Abstract 832 Background: Renal transplantation is the preferred therapeutic approach for end-stage renal disease. However, the chronic use of non-specific immunosuppressive agents (IS) is costly and has significant toxicities including opportunistic infection, an increased rate of malignancy, nephrotoxicity, and other end-organ damage. The induction of donor-specific tolerance would address these limitations. Bone marrow chimerism is associated with tolerance to transplanted organs and tissues. However, the toxicity associated with conventional hematopoietic stem cell transplants (HSCT), primarily graft-versus-host disease (GVHD), and the need for aggressive ablative conditioning, has limited the therapeutic application of HSCT to tolerance induction. We have identified a novel tolerogenic bone marrow cell population of CD8+/TCR− facilitating cells (FC) that enhances engraftment of bone marrow in mismatched recipients without causing GVHD. The discovery of FC is an important finding as it opens the door to employing HSCT as a viable cell-based approach for tolerance induction. Methods: We report here the long-term follow-up for 8 HLA mismatched living donor renal transplant recipients enrolled in a tolerogenic protocol involving low-intensity conditioning (fludarabine, cyclophosphamide [50 mg/kg, day −3, +3], 200 cGy TBI) followed by HSCT and renal transplantation. Lymphocyte depleting antibody therapy was not employed. Patients received a living donor kidney transplant on day 0, followed by infusion of cryopreserved FC-enriched donor-derived CD34+ HSC (FCRx) on day +1 (0.49–4.48 × 106 FC/kg recipient body weight) and a calculated dose of T cells (Table). All subjects were discharged by post-operative day 3 and managed as outpatients. Maintenance IS consisted of tacrolimus and MMF without steroids. Weaning of immunosuppression was designed to occur over a one-year period. At 6 months, if chimerism was present and renal function and biopsy normal, the MMF was discontinued; at 9 months the tacrolimus was decreased to trough levels of 3 to 5; and at 12 months, tacrolimus was discontinued. Characteristics and degree of HLA mismatch are shown in the table. Results: The patients are now 13 to 30 months post-transplant. All patients demonstrated peripheral blood macrochimerism post-transplant, ranging from 6% to 100% at 1 month by STR molecular analysis. No patient developed acute GVHD, showed evidence of engraftment syndrome, or has developed evidence of chronic GVHD. Chimerism was lost in two of the patients at 3 and 6 months post-transplant (NW 1 and 4). These subjects received an FCRx containing the fewest numbers of FC. Renal allograft loss occurred in one patient who developed sepsis and myelosuppression following an atypical viral infection 2 months post-transplant. He was successfully rescued with banked autologous HSCT. He was subsequently re-transplanted. The seven remaining patients demonstrate donor-specific hyporesponsiveness. Five have been successfully withdrawn entirely from IS, with one patient now off all IS for 15 months (30 months post-transplant). Four of these five subjects had mismatched unrelated (UR) donors (Table). None developed anti-donor antibody by flow crossmatch. Adverse events have included single dermatome herpes zoster reactivation in 2 patients which resolved. No clinically significant CMV or polyoma viral infections have occurred. Conclusions: Low intensity conditioning in conjunction with FC-enriched HSCT can safely achieve high level, durable donor chimerism in unrelated and related HLA-mismatched kidney transplant recipients without acute or chronic GVHD. This is associated with stable renal function and successful IS withdrawal. Disclosures: Tollerud: Regenerex, LLC: Equity Ownership. King:Regenerex, LLC: Employment. Ildstad:Regenerex, LLC: Equity Ownership.


2012 ◽  
Vol 2012 ◽  
pp. 1-11 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kadiyala V. Ravindra ◽  
Hong Xu ◽  
Larry D. Bozulic ◽  
David D. Song ◽  
Suzanne T. Ildstad

Successful hand and face transplantation in the last decade has firmly established the field of vascularized composite allotransplantation (VCA). The experience in VCA has thus far been very similar to solid organ transplantation in terms of the morbidity associated with long-term immunosuppression. The unique immunological features of VCA such as split tolerance and resistance to chronic rejection are being investigated. Simultaneously there has been laboratory work studying tolerogenic protocols in animal VCA models. In order to optimize VCA outcomes, translational studies are needed to develop less toxic immunosuppression and possibly achieve donor-specific tolerance. This article reviews the immunology, animal models, mixed chimerism & tolerance induction in VCA and the direction of future research to enable better understanding and wider application of VCA.


2012 ◽  
Vol 2012 ◽  
pp. 1-7 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wei-Chao Huang ◽  
Jeng-Yee Lin ◽  
Christopher Glenn Wallace ◽  
Fu-Chan Wei ◽  
Shuen-Kuei Liao

Although vascularized composite allografts (VCAs) have been performed clinically for a variety of indications, potential complications from long-term immunosuppression and graft-versus-host disease remain important barriers to widespread applications. Recently it has been demonstrated that VCAs incorporating a vascularized long bone in a rat model provide concurrent vascularized bone marrow transplantation that, itself, functions to establish hematopoietic chimerism and donor-specific tolerance following non-myeloablative conditioning of recipients. Advances such as this, which aim to improve the safety profile of tolerance induction, will help usher in an era of wider clinical VCA application for nonlife-saving reconstructions.


1991 ◽  
Vol 636 (1 Antigen and C) ◽  
pp. 79-94 ◽  
Author(s):  
STEPHEN D. MILLER ◽  
L. J. TAN ◽  
MARY K. KENNEDY ◽  
MAURO C. CANTO

2003 ◽  
Vol 197 (12) ◽  
pp. 1635-1644 ◽  
Author(s):  
Elmar Jaeckel ◽  
Ludger Klein ◽  
Natalia Martin-Orozco ◽  
Harald von Boehmer

Experiments in nonobese diabetic (NOD) mice that lacked expression of glutamic acid decarboxylase (GAD) in β cells have suggested that GAD represents an autoantigen essential for initiating and maintaining the diabetogenic immune response. Several attempts of inducing GAD-specific recessive tolerance to support this hypothesis have failed. Here we report on successful tolerance induction by expressing a modified form of GAD under control of the invariant chain promoter resulting in efficient epitope display. In spite of specific tolerance insulitis and diabetes occurred with normal kinetics indicating that GAD is not an essential autoantigen in the pathogenesis of diabetes.


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