| Literature DB >> 30102844 |
Christopher K Burghuber1,2, Miriam Manook3, Brian Ezekian3, Adriana C Gibby1, Frank V Leopardi3, Minqing Song3, Jennifer Jenks4, Frances Saccoccio5, Sallie Permar4,5, Alton B Farris6, Neal N Iwakoshi1, Jean Kwun1,3, Stuart J Knechtle1,3.
Abstract
Previous evidence suggests that a homeostatic germinal center (GC) response may limit bortezomib desensitization therapy. We evaluated the combination of costimulation blockade with bortezomib in a sensitized non-human primate kidney transplant model. Sensitized animals were treated with bortezomib, belatacept, and anti-CD40 mAb twice weekly for a month (n = 6) and compared to control animals (n = 7). Desensitization therapy-mediated DSA reductions approached statistical significance (P = .07) and significantly diminished bone marrow PCs, lymph node follicular helper T cells, and memory B cell proliferation. Graft survival was prolonged in the desensitization group (P = .073). All control animals (n = 6) experienced graft loss due to antibody-mediated rejection (AMR) after kidney transplantation, compared to one desensitized animal (1/5). Overall, histological AMR scores were significantly lower in the treatment group (n = 5) compared to control (P = .020). However, CMV disease was common in the desensitized group (3/5). Desensitized animals were sacrificed after long-term follow-up with functioning grafts. Dual targeting of both plasma cells and upstream GC responses successfully prolongs graft survival in a sensitized NHP model despite significant infectious complications and drug toxicity. Further work is planned to dissect underlying mechanisms, and explore safety concerns.Entities:
Keywords: alloantibody; animal models: nonhuman primate; basic (laboratory) research/science; desensitization; immunosuppressant - fusion proteins and monoclonal antibodies: costimulation molecule specific; immunosuppression/immune modulation; kidney transplantation/nephrology; plasma cells
Year: 2018 PMID: 30102844 PMCID: PMC7185755 DOI: 10.1111/ajt.15067
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am J Transplant ISSN: 1600-6135 Impact factor: 8.086