| Literature DB >> 27239198 |
Yi-Bin Chen1, Tatsuo Kawai2, Thomas R Spitzer1.
Abstract
The induction of specific tolerance, in order to avoid the detrimental effects of lifelong systemic immunosuppressive therapy after organ transplantation, has been considered the "Holy Grail" of transplantation. Experimentally, tolerance has been achieved through clonal deletion, through costimulatory blockade, through the induction or infusion of regulatory T-cells, and through the establishment of hematopoietic chimerism following donor bone marrow transplantation. The focus of this review is how tolerance has been achieved following combined bone marrow and kidney transplantation. Preclinical models of combined bone marrow and kidney transplantation have shown that tolerance can be achieved through either transient or sustained hematopoietic chimerism. Combined transplants for patients with multiple myeloma have shown that organ tolerance and prolonged disease remissions can be accomplished with such an approach. Similarly, multiple clinical strategies for achieving tolerance in patients without an underlying malignancy have been described, in the context of either transient or durable mixed chimerism or sustained full donor hematopoiesis. To expand the chimerism approach to deceased donor transplants, a delayed tolerance approach, which will involve organ transplantation with conventional immunosuppression followed months later by bone marrow transplantation, has been successful in a primate model. As combined bone marrow and organ transplantation become safer and increasingly successful, the achievement of specific tolerance may become more widely applicable.Entities:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27239198 PMCID: PMC4867066 DOI: 10.1155/2016/6471901
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Adv Hematol
| Center | MGH | MGH | MGH | Stanford | Northwestern |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Transplant type | HLA-matched related donor KdBMT for HM | Haploidentical donor KdBMT for HM | Haploidentical donor KdBMT for ESRD without malignancy | HLA-matched and haploidentical related and unrelated donor KdBMT for ESRD without malignancy | Haploidentical/mismatched related and unrelated donor KdBMT for ESRD without malignancy |
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| Chimerism goal | FDC | FDC | Transient mixed | Sustained mixed | FDC |
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| Results | Removal of IS in 5 of 10 patients (50%) | 3 of 4 patients in remission, two likely tolerant | 4 of 10 (40%) with sustained tolerance | Removal of IS in 44% (HLA-matched) | Removal of IS in 5 of 8 (63%) patients |
KdBMT: kidney and bone marrow transplant; HM: hematologic malignancy; FDC: full donor chimerism; IS: immunosuppression.
Figure 1Combined HLA-matched bone marrow and kidney transplant. Hemodialysis 14 hours after each Cy dose. Cy: cyclophosphamide; ATG: equine antithymocyte globulin; CSP: cyclosporine; cGy: centigray; DLI: donor lymphocyte infusion; KdMBT: combined kidney and bone marrow transplant.
Figure 2Schema for the 3 different versions (a, b, and c) of reduced intensity combined bone marrow and kidney transplantation using a haploidentical donor.