| Literature DB >> 28083612 |
Maria Boratyńska1, Dariusz Patrzałek2.
Abstract
Clinical transplantology in Poland had its 50th anniversary this year. With the early and long results comparable to the best achieved in the world leading centers, we face old and completely new challenges for this medical speciality. Main and growing challenge is insufficient number of available organs. With less than 15 donors/mln population/year Poland stay in the lower row of European countries in this measurement of transplant activity. Donation system is not efficient enough and we lose a big number of potential donors still. Living donation (with the exception for the fragments of the liver) remains low despite of different initiatives made so far on the national and local levels. Donation after cardiac death is possible from the point of Polish juridical regulations, but since last 3 years had not showed real impact on country donation rates (only three procedures done). Methods of tissue typing remain slow and cause relatively long times of cold ischemia for kidney programs. Second main challenge is chronic rejection causing loss of organs in the long-term follow-up and no efficient treatment employed. The emerging possibility of tolerance induction despite of plenty of new protocols proposition in the publications does not show up a clinical everyday practice in work. The same is with xenotransplantation promises; even we were informed recently that till 2030 such genetically modified porcine organs will be available. The next challenge is production of organs and tissues from own recipients cells installed on the different scaffolds or 3D printed. Other challenge is the personnel working in this field. We observe like in the other European countries lack of new candidates for work in this field together with serious problems of nursing staff, being a catastrophic perspective in country medical service in general, not only in transplant centers. The last but not least challenge is financial side of transplant programs.Entities:
Keywords: Chronic rejection; Clinical transplantation; Organ donation; Tolerance
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28083612 PMCID: PMC5334381 DOI: 10.1007/s00005-016-0439-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Arch Immunol Ther Exp (Warsz) ISSN: 0004-069X Impact factor: 4.291
Clinical trials the induction of immune tolerance in organ transplantation (ClinicalTrials.gov)
| Title of study | Tolerance-inducing strategy | Location and sponsor |
|---|---|---|
| Kidney and blood stem cell transplantation that eliminates requirement for immunosuppressive drugs | Kidney HLA-matched from LD; conditioning: TLI + ATG for 2 weeks; The stem cells (CD34) + CD3 removed from donor will be injected at the end of the 2-week treatment; CsA + MMF are stopped if stable chimerism is achieved | Stanford University |
| Tolerance induction in living donor kidney transplantation with hematopoietic stem cell transplantation | Conditioning: 1 week prior to KT; Rituximab, Fludarabine, Cyclophosphamide, Thymic irradiation; Donor HSCT infused immediately posttransplantation | Samsung Medical Center |
| Bone marrow transplantation and high dose posttransplant cyclophosphamide for chimerism induction and renal allograft tolerance | Conditioning: ATG, fludarabine, cyclophosphamide 14.5 mg/kg/day, TBI; infusion of bone marrow from donor on day 0; posttransplant: cyclophosphamide 50 mg/kg bw on day 3 and 4; MMF and prednisone | National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases; Collaborator: ITN |
| Use of belatacept during post depletional repopulation to facilitate tolerance in renal allograft recipients | Kidney from HLA-non-identical living or deceased donor; a single dose of alemtuzumab on the day of transplantation; a single dose of donor bone marrow 7 days after transplantation; belatacept and sirolimus for 1 year | Emory University Atlanta, US; Collaborator: Bristol-Myers Squibb |
| Autologous hematopoietic stem cell transplantation for allogeneic organ transplant tolerance; (ASCOTT) | 3–6 months after liver transplantation; step 1: chemotherapy and cytokine-based treatment for mobilization of HSC, ex vivo purification CD34; step 2: immune ablation (busulphan, cyclophosphamide, ATG) prior to the infusion of HSC | University of Toronto |
| Induction of donor-specific tolerance in recipients of cardiac allografts by donor stem cell infusion | Bone marrow processed to enrich hematopoietic stem cells and graft facilitating cells. Donor HSC infusion to recipient | University of Louisville; Jewish Hospital and St. Mary’s Healthcare; Hahnemann University Hospital; The Cleveland Clinic |
| Renal transplantation followed by infusion of T regulatory cells made with belatacept ex vivo (the ONE Study) | Recipients of LD; administration of Treg derived from recipient PBMC, stimulated with kidney donor PBMC in the presence of belatacept; measurement of Treg in the peripheral circulation of kidney recipients. Reduction of immunosuppression | Massachusetts General Hospital Collaborators: Dana-Farber Cancer Institute; University of Regensburg |
| Safety study of using regulatory T cells induce liver transplantation tolerance (Treg) | 1. Group: donor alloantigen-specific Tregs from PB of pretransplant patients, administered (1 × 106 cells/kg) at several intervals; 2. Group: 1–10 year post LD liver transplantation; isolated Tregs from these patients, and expanded with mismatched LD antigens; administration of donor antigen-specific Tregs (1 × 106 cells/kg) at several intervals | Nanjing Medical University; Collaborator: University of Minnesota |
| Efficacy of low dose, subcutaneous interleukin-2 (IL-2) to expand endogenous regulatory T cells in liver transplant recipients | Liver transplant recipients 2–4 years posttransplantation to receive IL-2 at dose 1.0 MIU/m2 body surface area for 4 weeks to expand Tregs | Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center |
| The ONE Study: a unified approach to evaluating cellular immunotherapy in solid organ transplantation—M Reg trial | Donor Mreg at dose 2.5–7.5 million cells/kg bw infused into recipients 6–7 days before kidney transplantation from live donor | University of Regensburg |
| Mesenchymal stem cells (MSC) under basiliximab/low dose RATG to induce renal transplant | Infusion of syngenic ex vivo expanded MSCs (2 × 106/kg bw) at the time of kidney transplantation from LD under basiliximab/low dose ATG induction therapy and maintenance CsA, MMF and prednisone | Mario Negri Institute for Pharmacological Research, Italy |
| Third-party bone marrow-derived mesenchymal stromal cells to induce tolerance in liver transplant recipients | In liver transplant: a single intravenous infusion (1–2 millions of MSCs/kg bw) of ex vivo expanded third-party MSC (from healthy donors) | Monia Lorini, Mario Negri Institute for Pharmacological Research |
TBI total body irradiation, TLI total lymphoid irradiation, LD living donor, KT kidney transplantation, HSCT hematopoietic stem cell transplantation, Mreg regulatory macrophages, PB peripheral blood, MSC mesenchymal stromal cells, ATG anti-thymocyte globulin, CsA cyclosporine A, MMF mycophenolate mofetil, ITN Immune Tolerance Network