Individuality: the barrier to optimal immunosuppression
- 1 October 2003
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Springer Nature in Nature Reviews Immunology
- Vol. 3 (10) , 831-838
- https://doi.org/10.1038/nri1204
Abstract
Immunosuppressive therapy aims to protect transplanted organs from host responses. Individuals have unique repertoires of responses to foreign antigens and toxic reactions to immunosuppressants; the former determining the type or intensity of rejection reactions and the latter influencing the severity of iatrogenic effects. Because existing agents target molecules that are widely distributed in tissues, new strategies must selectively block lymphoid cells only, disrupt alloresponses but not innate immune responses, interact synergistically with other agents, facilitate the homeostatic process that naturally leads to graft acceptance and ideally only interrupt donor-specific responses. Approaches presently under investigation aim to alter cell trafficking, or selectively deviate the maturation of antigen-presenting cells or inhibit lymphocyte-activation cascades - events that are crucial to rejection responses.Keywords
This publication has 78 references indexed in Scilit:
- Pharmacogenetics of Drug Metabolising Enzymes: Importance for Personalised Medicinecclm, 2003
- A BLINDED, LONG-TERM, RANDOMIZED MULTICENTER STUDY OF MYCOPHENOLATE MOFETIL IN CADAVERIC RENAL TRANSPLANTATIONTransplantation, 1998
- Total lymphoid irradiation in renal transplantationWorld Journal of Surgery, 1986
- TREATMENT OF CADAVERIC RENAL TRANSPLANT RECIPIENTS WITH TOTAL LYMPHOID IRRADIATION, ANTITHYMOCYTE GLOBULIN, AND LOW-DOSE PREDNISONEThe Lancet, 1985
- A STUDY OF THE EFFECTS OF DRUGS IN PROLONGING SURVIVAL OF HOMOLOGOUS RENAL TRANSPLANTS IN DOGS*Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences, 1962
- Drug-induced Immunological ToleranceNature, 1959
- THE CHEMISTRY AND BIOCHEMISTRY OF PURINE ANALOGSAnnals of the New York Academy of Sciences, 1954
- EXPERIMENTAL RENAL TRANSPLANTATION: I. EFFECT OF NITROGEN MUSTARD, CORTISONE, AND SPLENECTOMYArchives of Surgery, 1952
- The Effect of Benzene on the Production of AntibodiesThe Journal of Infectious Diseases, 1916
- The Lymphocyte as a Factor in Natural and Induced Resistance to Transplanted CancerProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1915