| Literature DB >> 35042019 |
Madonna Rica Anggelia1, Hui-Yun Cheng2, Ping-Chin Lai3, Yun-Huan Hsieh4, Chih-Hung Lin1, Cheng-Hung Lin5.
Abstract
Allograft rejection is one of the obstacles in achieving a successful vascularized composite allotransplantation (VCA). Treatments of graft rejection with lifelong immunosuppression (IS) subject the recipients to a lifelong risk of cancer development and opportunistic infections. Cell therapy has recently emerged as a promising strategy to modulate the immune system, minimize immunosuppressant drug dosages, and induce allograft tolerance. In this review, the recent works regarding the use of cell therapy to improve allograft outcomes are discussed. The current data supports the safety of cell therapy. The suitable type of cell therapy in allotransplantation is clinically dependent. Bone marrow cell therapy is more suitable for the induction phase, while other cell therapies are more feasible in either the induction or maintenance phase, or for salvage of allograft rejection. Immune cell therapy focuses on modulating the immune response, whereas stem cells may have an additional role in promoting structural regenerations, such as nerve regeneration. Source, frequency, dosage, and route of cell therapy delivery are also dependent on the specific need in the clinical setting.Entities:
Keywords: Cell therapy; Clinical transplantation; Immune cell; Stem cell; Vascularized composite allotransplantation
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35042019 PMCID: PMC9422067 DOI: 10.1016/j.bj.2022.01.005
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomed J ISSN: 2319-4170 Impact factor: 7.892
Fig. 1Roadmap of technical considerations regarding the use of cell therapy.
Immune cell therapy in the VCA animal study.
| Literature (Year) | Cell Type | Species | Model | Dosage (Day of administration), Route | Induction and IS (Day of administration) | Outcome | Mechanism |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Kuo et al. (2009) [ | Alloantigen-stimulated DCs | Rat | Hindlimb | 0.7-1x107 (7,14,21), | ALS (−4,1), CsA (0–20) | Prolong allograft >200 days | Induce T cell donor-specific hyporesponsiveness |
| Cheng et al. (2018) [ | Alloantigen-stimulated | Rat | Hindlimb | 7 × 105-2x106 (10), IV | ALS (−1,2) + CsA (0–7) | Maintenance of graft acceptance | Tregs graft engraftment |
| Anggelia et al. (2021) [ | CD4+CD25+Tregs from tolerant recipients | Mouse | Osteo-myocutaneous | 2 × 106 (30), | CoB (0,2) + RPM (0–28) | Rescue graft rejection | Suppress donor specific T cell proliferation |
| Lin et al. (2013) [ | CD4−CD8-Tregs | Mouse | Osteo-myocutaneous | 5 × 106 (0), | ALS | Prolong allograft >180 days | Induce T cell donor-specific hyporesponsiveness |
| Radu et al. (2012) [ | Donor Mregs | Rat | Osteo-myocutaneous | 5 × 106 (0), | NA | Extended allograft survival from 5.6 to 7.4 days | Reduce infiltration of inflammatory cells |
Abbreviations: ALS: anti-lymphocytes serum; CsA: cyclosporine A; CoB: costimulation blockade; DCs: dendritic cells; IM: intramuscular; IS: immunosuppression; IV: intravenous; Mregs: regulatory macrophages; Tregs: regulatory T cells; NA: not applicable; RPM: rapamycin.
Fig. 2The proven immunomodulatory mechanisms of Immune cell therapy in the animal VCA study.
Fig. 3The proven immunomodulatory mechanisms of stem cell therapy in the animal VCA study.
Fig. 4Illustration of immune cell and stem cell immunomodulatory mechanisms in VCA transplantation.
Stem cell therapy in the VCA animal study.
| Literature (Year) | Cell Type | Species | Model | Dosage (Day of administration), Route | Induction and IS (Day of administration) | Outcome | Mechanism |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Xu et al. (2013) [ | Donor | Rat | Osteo-myocutaneous | 1.5 × 108 (0), IV | Anti-TCR (−3) + TBI (−1) + ALS (9) +Tac (−1–9) | Prolong allografts >200 days | Thymic deletion alloreactive T cell, superior donor-specific Tregs |
| Lin et al. (2021) [ | Donor | Mouse | Myocutaneous | 1.5 × 108 (0), IV | CoB (0,2) + RPM (0–28) | Prolong allografts >120 days | Induce chimerism and donor-specific tolerance |
| Mathes et al. (2014) [ | Donor | Canine | Hindlimb | 1.7-5.1 × 108/kg (0), IV | TBI (−1) + CsA (-1-35) + MMF (0–28) | Prolong allografts >62 weeks | Increase Tregs engraftment, induce donor-specific tolerance |
| Leonard et al. (2014) [ | Donor | Swine | Fascio-cutaneous | 15 × 109 (0), | T cell depletion + non-myeloablatıve | Prolong allograft 85–100 days | Induce peripheral blood chimerism between 20 and 100% |
| Mitsuzawa et al. (2019) [ | Syngeneic iMSCs | Rat | Hindlimb | 2 × 106 (7), IV | Tac (0–6) | Prolong allografts >17–21 days | Induce T cell donor-specific hyporesponsiveness |
| Kuo et al. (2017) [ | Autologous | Swine | Hindlimb | 1 × 106/kg (0–3), IV | TBI (−1) + Tac | Prolong allografts >196 days | Modulate T cell regulation |
| Plock et al. (2017) [ | Syngeneic | Rat | Hindlimb | 1 × 106 (4,8,15) | ALS (−4,1), Tac (0–21) | Prolong 50% allografts >100 days | Induce chimerism and donor-specific tolerance, elevate Tregs |
| Kuo et al. (2011) [ | Donor | Rat | Hindlimb | 2 × 106 (7,14,21), IV | ALS (−4,1) + CsA (0–20) | Prolong allografts >200 days | Suppress T cell and enhance Tregs proliferation |
| Cheng et al. (2014) [ | Syngeneic | Rat | Osteo-myocutaneous | 2 × 106 (1), IV | TBI (−1) + ALG (−1,10) + CsA (0–10) | Prolong 67% allografts >140 days | Induce donor-specific tolerance, elevated circulating Tregs |
| Schweizer et al. (2020) [ | Syngeneic | Rat | Hindlimb | 1 × 106 (2,4,7,14,28), | CTLA4Ig (2,4,7) + ALS (1,5) + Tac (0–14) | Prolong 86% allografts >120 days | Induce chimerism and elevated systemic and skin |
Abbreviations: AD-MSCs: adipose derived mesenchymal stem cells; ALG: anti-lymphocyte globulin; ALS: anti-lymphocytes serum; BM: bone marrow; CsA: cyclosporine A; CoB: costimulation blockade; DCs: dendritic cells; IM: intramuscular; iMSCs: induced mesenchymal stem cells; IS: immunosuppression; IV: intravenous; NA: not applicable; RPM: rapamycin; Tac: tacrolimus; TBI: total body irradiation.
Cell therapy in clinical transplantation.
| Literature (Year) | Cell Type | Model | Phase | Dosage (Days of administration), Route | Induction and IS (Days of administration) | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Schneeberger et al. (2013) [ | Donor BM cells | Upper Extremity | I | 5–10 × 108/kg (14), IV | Alemtuzumab (0) + methylprednisolone (0) + tapered Tac | Safe and allows to use low-dose Tac monotherapy |
| Del Bene et al. (2013) [ | Autologous MSCs | Bilateral Hand Transplant | I | 2 × 106 (1), IV | Basiliximab (4) + methylprednisolone (0–6) cortisone + Tac + MMF | Graft acceptance up to 10 months |
| Macedo et al. (2020) [ | Donor-derived DCregs | Liver | I | 2.5-10 × 106 (−7, −3, 0), | Mycophenolic acid | Safe and induce systemic changes in recipient antigen presenting cells and T cells |
| Todo et al. (2016) [ | Donor-specific Tregs | Liver | I | 0.23–6.37 × 106/kg (13), IV | Steroids + MMF (0–30) + Tac/CsA/RPM + CP (5) | Normal function 3/10 Patients show mild rejection after 1 year transplant |
| Sawitzki et al. (2020) [ | CBMPs (DCregs, Mregs, Tregs) | Kidney | I/IIa | 2.0–2.5 × 106/kg (−1 or 7), IV | Basiliximab + tapered steroids, MMF, and Tac | Weaned IS |
| Sánchez-Fueyo et al. (2020) [ | AutologousPolyclonal Tregs | Liver | I | 1-4.5 × 106 (90), | Thymoglobulin (1–7) + Tac + methylprednisolone (700) | Reduced anti-donor T cell responses |
| Mathew et al. (2018) [ | Polyclonal Tregs | Kidney | I | 0.5, 1, and 5 × 109 (60), IV | Alemtuzumab (0,2)+ Tac (-1-30) + Sirolimus (replace Tac) + Mycophenolate | No rejection up to 2 years |
| Roemhild et al. (2020) [ | Polyclonal Tregs | Kidney | I/IIa | 0.5, 1.0, or 2.5-3.0 × 106/kg (7), | Prednisone (0–98) + | Enable minimization of IS |
| Hutchinson et al. (2011) [ | Donor-derived | Kidney | I | 5 × 107 (−6/-7) | Steroid (0–700) + Tac | Stable kidney function up to 3 years with minimal maintenance IS |
| Detry et al. (2017) [ | Donor MSCs | Liver | I | 3 × 106/kg (3), | ATG + Tac (0–270) + MMF (0–365) + Steroid | Did not promote tolerance |
| Shi et al. (2017) [ | UC-MSCs | Liver | I | 3 × 106/kg during acute rejection, | Basiliximab + tapered corticosteroids + prednisolone (0–90) + MMF + Tac | UC-MSC infusion for acute graft rejection is feasible |
Abbreviations: ATG: anti-thymocytes globulin; CsA: cyclosporine A; CBMPs: cell-based medicinal products; CMV: cytomegalovirus; CP: cyclophosphamide; DCregs: regulatory dendritic cells; IS: immunosuppression; IV: intravenous; MMF: mycophenolate mofetil; Mregs: regulatory macrophages; MSCs: mesenchymal stem cells; NA: not applicable; RPM: rapamycin; Tac: tacrolimus; Tregs: regulatory T cells; UC-MSCs: umbilical cord mesenchymal stem cells.