Infusion of donor leukocytes to induce tolerance in organ allograft recipients
Open Access
- 1 August 1999
- journal article
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in Journal of Leukocyte Biology
- Vol. 66 (2) , 310-314
- https://doi.org/10.1002/jlb.66.2.310
Abstract
To further enhance chimerism, 229 primary allograft recipients have received perioperative intravenous infusion of a single dose of 3 to 6 × 108 unmodified donor bone marrow (BM) cells/kg body weight. In addition, 42 patients have been accrued in a concurrent protocol involving multiple (up to three) sequential perioperative infusions of 2 × 108 BM cells/kg/day from day 0–2 posttransplantation (PTx). Organ recipients (n = 133) for whom BM was not available were monitored as controls. The infusion of BM was safe and except for 50 (18%), all study patients have optimal graft function. Of the control patients, allografts in 30 (23%) have been lost during the course of follow-up. The cumulative risk of acute cellular rejection (ACR) was statistically lower in the study patients compared with that of controls. It is interesting that, 62% of BM-augmented heart recipients were free of ACR (Grade ≥ 3A) in the first 6 months PTx compared to controls. The incidence of obliterative bronchiolitis was also statistically lower in study lung recipients (3.8%) compared with the contemporaneously acquired controls (31%). The levels of donor cell chimerism were at least a log higher in the peripheral blood of majority of the study patients compared with that of controls. The incidence of donor-specific hyporeactivity, as determined by one-way mixed leukocyte reaction, was also higher in those BM-augmented liver, kidney, and lung recipients that could be evaluated compared to controls. J. Leukoc. Biol. 66: 310–314; 1999.Keywords
This publication has 15 references indexed in Scilit:
- Antigen Localization and Migration in Immunity and ToleranceNew England Journal of Medicine, 1998
- WEANING OF IMMUNOSUPPRESSION IN LIVER TRANSPLANT RECIPIENTS12Transplantation, 1997
- The lost chord: microchimerism and allograft survivalImmunology Today, 1996
- IMMUNE STATUS OF RECIPIENTS FOLLOWING BONE MARROW-AUGMENTED SOLID ORGAN TRANSPLANTATION1,2Transplantation, 1995
- Bone marrow augmentation of donor-cell chimerism in kidney, liver, heart, and pancreas islet transplantationThe Lancet, 1994
- A human XY female with a frame shift mutation in the candidate testis-determining gene SRYNature, 1990
- A BIOLOGICAL ROLE FOR THE MAJOR HISTOCOMPATIBILITY ANTIGENSThe Lancet, 1975
- Haematopoietic Chimera in Man After Allogenic (Homologous) Bone-marrow TransplantationBMJ, 1963
- Homograft Sensitivity: An Expression of the Immunologic Origins and Consequences of IndividualityPhysiological Reviews, 1959
- ‘Actively Acquired Tolerance’ of Foreign CellsNature, 1953