Literature DB >> 17634435

Frontiers in nephrology: immune tolerance to allografts in humans.

Raffaele Girlanda1, Allan D Kirk.   

Abstract

Vascularized allografts are rejected unless some indefinite modification to the recipient's immune system is made. This modification is typically achieved through the long-term administration of immunosuppressive drugs. Patients thus trade their end-stage organ failure for dependence on daily drug therapy and the accompanying chronic condition of immunodeficiency. However, it is clear from studies in experimental animals that rejection can be prevented through the use of several therapeutic approaches, including donor hematopoietic cell infusion, chimerism, T cell depletion, and/or co-stimulation blockade. Successfully treated animals avoid rejection beyond the period of therapy without a phenotype of chronic immunosuppression and are thus considered to be tolerant of their grafts. Although intriguing, this success in animals has yet to be reproducibly translated to the clinic, and human transplant recipients remain tethered to immunosuppressive drugs with rare exceptions. This article provides an overview of the existing, largely anecdotal, clinical experience with organ allograft tolerance. It reviews the various approaches that are being applied in pilot human trials and suggests avenues for future clinical investigation.

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Year:  2007        PMID: 17634435     DOI: 10.1681/ASN.2007020180

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Am Soc Nephrol        ISSN: 1046-6673            Impact factor:   10.121


  8 in total

Review 1.  The Immune Tolerance Network at 10 years: tolerance research at the bedside.

Authors:  Jeffrey A Bluestone; Hugh Auchincloss; Gerald T Nepom; Daniel Rotrosen; E William St Clair; Laurence A Turka
Journal:  Nat Rev Immunol       Date:  2010-11       Impact factor: 53.106

Review 2.  Immunologic basis of graft rejection and tolerance following transplantation of liver or other solid organs.

Authors:  Alberto Sánchez-Fueyo; Terry B Strom
Journal:  Gastroenterology       Date:  2010-11-09       Impact factor: 22.682

Review 3.  Cell therapeutic approaches to immunosuppression after clinical kidney transplantation.

Authors:  Christian Morath; Anita Schmitt; Florian Kälble; Martin Zeier; Michael Schmitt; Flavius Sandra-Petrescu; Gerhard Opelz; Peter Terness; Matthias Schaier; Christian Kleist
Journal:  Pediatr Nephrol       Date:  2017-02-23       Impact factor: 3.714

4.  Rapid dendritic cell activation and resistance to allotolerance induction in anti-CD154-treated mice receiving CD47-deficient donor-specific transfusion.

Authors:  Yuantao Wang; Hui Wang; Roderick Bronson; Yaowen Fu; Yong-Guang Yang
Journal:  Cell Transplant       Date:  2013-01-02       Impact factor: 4.064

5.  Regulatory, effector, and cytotoxic T cell profiles in long-term kidney transplant patients.

Authors:  Joanna Ashton-Chess; Emilie Dugast; Robert B Colvin; Magali Giral; Yohann Foucher; Anne Moreau; Karine Renaudin; Christophe Braud; Anne Devys; Sophie Brouard; Jean-Paul Soulillou
Journal:  J Am Soc Nephrol       Date:  2009-04-08       Impact factor: 10.121

Review 6.  Clinical transplantation and tolerance: are we there yet?

Authors:  R F Saidi; S K Hejazii Kenari
Journal:  Int J Organ Transplant Med       Date:  2014

Review 7.  Old game, new players: Linking classical theories to new trends in transplant immunology.

Authors:  Marina Burgos da Silva; Flavia Franco da Cunha; Fernanda Fernandes Terra; Niels Olsen Saraiva Camara
Journal:  World J Transplant       Date:  2017-02-24

8.  MCMV Dissemination from Latently-Infected Allografts Following Transplantation into Pre-Tolerized Recipients.

Authors:  Sahil Shah; Matthew DeBerge; Andre Iovane; Shixian Yan; Longhui Qiu; Jiao-Jing Wang; Yashpal S Kanwar; Mary Hummel; Zheng J Zhang; Michael M Abecassis; Xunrong Luo; Edward B Thorp
Journal:  Pathogens       Date:  2020-07-26
  8 in total

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