Graft survival and immune regulation of pancreas allograft recipients induced with thymoglobulin, sirolimus, and cyclosporine. Academic Article uri icon

Overview

abstract

  • BACKGROUND: Our objective was to determine the impact of thymoglobulin-sirolimus-cyclosporine immunosuppression on the alloimmune response of pancreas-kidney transplant recipients. METHODS: Thirty-six pancreas transplant recipients received an induction protocol of thymoglobulin, sirolimus, reduced-dose cyclosporine, and corticosteroids. A subset of 10 recipients were also enrolled in a study to measure immune responsiveness. Flow PRA-determined HLA antibody, donor-specific flow cytometry crossmatching (FCXM), T-cell subset, and suppressor cell assays were performed at various timepoints during the first posttransplant year. RESULTS: One-year patient, kidney, and pancreas survivals were 97%, 94%, and 92%, respectively. There was 1 death due to sepsis, and 1 kidney and 2 pancreas graft losses. There were no acute rejection episodes. Recipients in the immune-monitoring study displayed depression of CD3, CD4, and CD8 counts (<80%) until 3 months posttransplant. At transplantation, 9 of 10 patients displayed <10% class I HLA antibody. By 3 months, 7 of 10 showed a transient elevation in class I HLA antibodies, with 2 patients expressing >80% flow PRA. At transplant 1 patient was FCXM-positive, whereas, by 3 months posttransplant, 2 of 10 patients demonstrated a positive FCXM. There were no clinical consequences to either the presence of HLA antibody or the positive FCXMs. By 6 months, 7 of 9 patients expressed immunoregulatory suppressor cell activity. CONCLUSIONS: The absence of acute rejection events was likely due to inhibition of donor-specific immunity. Seventy percent of patients demonstrated an early non-donor-directed HLA antibody response that had no adverse effect on graft function and 78% of the patients displayed immunoregulatory suppressor cell function, probably contributing to the successful clinical outcome.

publication date

  • March 1, 2005

Research

keywords

  • Antilymphocyte Serum
  • Cyclosporine
  • Graft Survival
  • Kidney Transplantation
  • Pancreas Transplantation
  • Sirolimus
  • Transplantation Conditioning

Identity

Scopus Document Identifier

  • 17844369747

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

  • 10.1016/j.transproceed.2004.12.131

PubMed ID

  • 15848695

Additional Document Info

volume

  • 37

issue

  • 2