Operational Tolerance in Intestinal Transplantation.

MedStar author(s):
Citation: American Journal of Transplantation. 2020 Jul 28PMID: 32721092Institution: MedStar Health Research InstituteForm of publication: Journal ArticleMedline article type(s): Journal ArticleSubject headings: IN PROCESS -- NOT YET INDEXEDYear: 2020ISSN:
  • 1600-6135
Name of journal: American journal of transplantation : official journal of the American Society of Transplantation and the American Society of Transplant SurgeonsAbstract: By presenting the first case report of true operational tolerance in an intestinal transplant patient, we aim to demonstrate that tolerance is possible in a field which has been hampered by sub-optimal outcomes. While operational tolerance has been achieved in liver and kidney transplantation, and some intestinal transplant patients have been able to decrease immunosuppression, this is the first instance of true operational tolerance after complete cessation of immunosuppression. A patient received a deceased-donor small intestinal and colon allograft with standard immunosuppressive treatment, achieving excellent graft function after overcoming a graft-versus-host-disease episode 5 months post-transplant. Four years later, against medical advice, the patient discontinued all immunosuppression. During follow-up visits 2 and 3 years after cessation of immunosuppression, the patient exhibited normal graft function with full enteral autonomy and without histological or endoscopic signs of rejection. Mechanistic analysis demonstrated immune competence against third party antigen, with in vitro evidence of donor-specific hyporesponsiveness in the absence of donor macrochimerism. This proof of principle case can stimulate future mechanistic studies on diagnostic and therapeutic strategies, for example cellular therapy trials, that can lead to minimization or elimination of immunosuppression and hopefully help revitalize the field of intestinal transplantation. Copyright This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.All authors: Ashokkumar C, Belyayev L, Duttargi A, Fishbein TM, Kang J, Kaufman SS, Khan K, Kroemer A, Matsumoto CS, Sindhi R, Timofeeva OA, Weiner J, Zasloff MFiscal year: FY2021Digital Object Identifier: Date added to catalog: 2020-09-02
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Journal Article MedStar Authors Catalog Article 32721092 Available 32721092

By presenting the first case report of true operational tolerance in an intestinal transplant patient, we aim to demonstrate that tolerance is possible in a field which has been hampered by sub-optimal outcomes. While operational tolerance has been achieved in liver and kidney transplantation, and some intestinal transplant patients have been able to decrease immunosuppression, this is the first instance of true operational tolerance after complete cessation of immunosuppression. A patient received a deceased-donor small intestinal and colon allograft with standard immunosuppressive treatment, achieving excellent graft function after overcoming a graft-versus-host-disease episode 5 months post-transplant. Four years later, against medical advice, the patient discontinued all immunosuppression. During follow-up visits 2 and 3 years after cessation of immunosuppression, the patient exhibited normal graft function with full enteral autonomy and without histological or endoscopic signs of rejection. Mechanistic analysis demonstrated immune competence against third party antigen, with in vitro evidence of donor-specific hyporesponsiveness in the absence of donor macrochimerism. This proof of principle case can stimulate future mechanistic studies on diagnostic and therapeutic strategies, for example cellular therapy trials, that can lead to minimization or elimination of immunosuppression and hopefully help revitalize the field of intestinal transplantation. Copyright This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.

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