| Literature DB >> 33877965 |
Kirsten M Williams1, Yoshihiro Inamoto2, Annie Im3, Betty Hamilton4, John Koreth5, Mukta Arora6, Iskra Pusic7, Jacqueline W Mays8, Paul A Carpenter9, Leo Luznik10, Pavan Reddy11, Jerome Ritz5, Hildegard Greinix12, Sophie Paczesny13, Bruce R Blazar14, Joseph Pidala15, Corey Cutler5, Daniel Wolff16, Kirk R Schultz17, Steven Z Pavletic18, Stephanie J Lee19, Paul J Martin19, Gerard Socie20, Stefanie Sarantopoulos21.
Abstract
Preventing chronic graft-versus-host disease (GVHD) remains challenging because the unique cellular and molecular pathways that incite chronic GVHD are poorly understood. One major point of intervention for potential prevention of chronic GVHD occurs at the time of transplantation when acute donor anti-recipient immune responses first set the events in motion that result in chronic GVHD. After transplantation, additional insults causing tissue injury can incite aberrant immune responses and loss of tolerance, further contributing to chronic GVHD. Points of intervention are actively being identified so that chronic GVHD initiation pathways can be targeted without affecting immune function. The major objective in the field is to continue basic studies and to translate what is learned about etiopathology to develop targeted prevention strategies that decrease the risk of morbid chronic GVHD without increasing the risks of cancer relapse or infection. Development of strategies to predict the risk of developing debilitating or deadly chronic GVHD is a high research priority. This working group recommends further interrogation into the mechanisms underpinning chronic GVHD development, and we highlight considerations for future trial design in prevention trials.Entities:
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Year: 2021 PMID: 33877965 PMCID: PMC8217141 DOI: 10.1016/j.jtct.2021.02.035
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Transplant Cell Ther ISSN: 2666-6367