STABLE LUNG ALLOGRAFT OUTCOME CORRELATES WITH THE PRESENCE OF INTRAGRAFT DONOR-DERIVED LEUKOCYTES1
- 1 November 1998
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Transplantation
- Vol. 66 (9) , 1167-1174
- https://doi.org/10.1097/00007890-199811150-00010
Abstract
The role of bone marrow-derived "passenger" leukocytes in the outcome of solid organ transplantation remains controversial. This study tested the relationship between high levels of donor-derived leukocytes within the transplanted organ and clinical outcome after lung transplantation. Sequential bronchoalveolar lavage samples were obtained from human lung allograft recipients. Leukocytes of donor origin in the bronchoalveolar lavage fluid were detected using two-color immunofluorescence, and the results were correlated with multiple clinical parameters. Mean donor leukocytes levels for the first 200 days after transplantation were higher in patients with a good transplantation outcome compared with those patients who lost their grafts due to acute rejection (AR) or developed bronchiolitis obliterans syndrome. The presence of low numbers of donor-derived leukocytes for the first 200 days after transplantation was found to be a significant risk factor for graft loss due to either acute or chronic rejection (P=0.032). Nearly all patients (85%) experienced AR episodes. However, the time to onset of severe AR episodes was significantly longer (P=0.049), and the incidence of these episodes reduced, in patients who maintained high numbers of donor-derived leukocytes for the first 200 days after transplantation. The presence of high numbers of donor-derived leukocytes, particularly macrophages, in the transplanted lung in the first 200 days after transplantation was associated with stable graft function. Donor-derived leukocytes were reduced or absent in patients with a poor transplantation outcome. These findings rule out a negative influence of persisting donor leukocytes and are consistent with the emerging two-way models of transplant tolerance.Keywords
This publication has 39 references indexed in Scilit:
- TOLERANCE INDUCTION TO CULTURED ISLET ALLOGRAFTSTransplantation, 1994
- Migration and maturation of Langerhans cells in skin transplants and explants.The Journal of Experimental Medicine, 1990
- Migration of dendritic leukocytes from cardiac allografts into host spleens. A novel pathway for initiation of rejection.The Journal of Experimental Medicine, 1990
- INABILITY OF DENDRITIC CELLS TO PREVENT THE BLOOD TRANSFUSION EFFECT IN A MOUSE CARDIAC ALLOGRAFT MODELTransplantation, 1987
- Immunobiology of Tissue Transplantation: A Return to the Passenger Leukocyte ConceptAnnual Review of Immunology, 1983
- Immunogenicity of retransplanted rat kidney allografts. Effect of inducing chimerism in the first recipient and quantitative studies on immunosuppression of the second recipient.The Journal of Experimental Medicine, 1982
- Restoration of immunogenicity to passenger cell-depleted kidney allografts by the addition of donor strain dendritic cells.The Journal of Experimental Medicine, 1982
- Failure of long surviving, passively enhanced kidney allografts to provoke T-dependent alloimmunity. I. Retransplantation of (AS X AUG)F1 kidneys into secondary AS recipients.The Journal of Experimental Medicine, 1979
- Immunization with Skin Isografts Taken from Tolerant MiceScience, 1967
- The Homograft ReactionAnnual Review of Microbiology, 1957