Efficacy of Rapamycin and FK 506 in Prolonging Rat Hind Limb Allograft Survival
- 1 January 1994
- journal article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Annals of Surgery
- Vol. 219 (1) , 88-93
- https://doi.org/10.1097/00000658-199401000-00014
Abstract
Graft rejection and the toxicity of current immunosuppressive regimens preclude the application of microsurgical advances to transplantation of limbs or other nonessential parts. If limb transplantation is to become a clinical reality, newer, safer, more effective immunosuppressive agents are needed. Rapamycin (RPM) and FK 506 are fungal macrolide antibiotics with effective immunosuppressive properties demonstrated in several animal models. RPM is more potent and effective than is FK 506 in rat cardiac allografts and has demonstrated synergy with cyclosporine (CsA) in limb allograft models. An orthotopic rat hind limb allograft model (Brown-Norway [RT-1n] to Lewis [RT-1(1)] rats was used. RPM (doses, 3.0, 4.5, and 6.0 mg/kg/day) was administered intraperitoneally on postoperative days 1 to 14. FK 506 (6 mg/kg/day) was administered orally on postoperative 1 to 14 and 1 to 90 and at rejection onset (10 mg/kg/day for salvage). CsA with RPM (postoperative days 1 to 14) was used to assess synergy, with CsA alone serving as the control. Other controls included untreated and placebo-treated allografted animals. The permutation test and Mann-Whitney test were applied to the data. The mean survival times were assessed as follows: (1) control (placebo, untreated), 5 days; (2) RPM groups, 9.5, 10.6, and 8.7 days; (3) 14-day FK 506, 28 days; (4) 90-day FK 506, > 90 days; (5) CsA, 17.3 days; and (6) CsA with RPM, 19.3 days. FK 506 significantly prolonged graft survival compared with RPM (Permutation Test, p < 0.001 and Mann-Whitney Test, p < 0.05). FK 506 salvage reversed early rejection. High-dose RPM produced significant toxicity. Synergy between CsA and RPM was not demonstrated. FK 506 prolongs allograft survival, reverses early rejection, and prevents rejection without clinical toxicity when given continually. RPM does not prevent rejection in this model and produces significant toxicity at high doses. FK 506 may be a first step in making limb transplantation a clinical reality in reconstructive surgery.Keywords
This publication has 19 references indexed in Scilit:
- Experimental studies of vascularized allogeneic limb transplantation in the rat using a new immunosuppressive agent, FK-506: morphological and immunological analysis.1989
- Hand transplantation in baboons.1987
- Use of Cyclosporin A in Allotransplantation of Rat LimbsAnnals of Plastic Surgery, 1984
- Limb Allografts in Rats Immunosuppressed with Cyclosporin AAnnals of Surgery, 1984
- The Use of Cyclosporin A in clinical Organ GraftingAnnals of Surgery, 1982
- Heart-Lung TransplantationNew England Journal of Medicine, 1982
- CARDIAC-ALLOGRAFT SURVIVAL IN PRIMATES TREATED WITH CYCLOSPORIN AThe Lancet, 1979
- Survival of cardiac allografts in rats treated with cyclosporin A.1979
- Transplantation of the canine hind limb. Surgical technique and methods of immunosuppression for allotransplantation. A preliminary report.1971
- Canine Limb HomotransplantationPlastic and Reconstructive Surgery, 1966