80 resultados para TRANSPLANT RECIPIENTS
Resumo:
Experimental models of orthotopic liver transplantation (OLT) have shown that the very early events post-OLT are critical in distinguishing immunogenic and tolerogenic reactions. In rodents, increased leukocyte apoptosis and cytokine expression have been demonstrated in tolerogenic strain combinations. Information from human OLT recipients is less abundant. The aim of this study was to determine the amount of early leukocyte activation and apoptosis following human OLT, and to correlate this with subsequent rejection status. Peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) were isolated from 76 patients undergoing OLT - on the day prior, 5 hrs after reperfusion (day 0), and 18-24 hrs post-OLT (day 1). The mean level of apoptotic PBMCs on post OLT day 1 was higher than healthy recipients (0.9% +/- 0.2 vs. 0.2% +/- 0.1, p = 0.013). Apoptosis was greater in nonrejecting (NR) (1.1% +/- 0.3) compared with acutely-rejecting (R) (0.3% +/- 0.1, p = 0.021) patients. On day 1, PBMC from NR patients had increased expression of IFN-gamma (p = 0.006), IL-10 (p = 0.016), and CD40 ligand (p = 0.02) compared with R. Donor cell chimerism on day 1 did not differ between the groups indicating that this was unlikely to account for increased PBMC apoptosis in the NR group. Interestingly, the level of chimerism on day 0 was significantly higher in NR (3.8% +/- 0.6) compared with R (1.2% +/- 0.4, p = 0.004) patients and there was a close correlation between chimerism on day 0 and cytokine expression on day 1. These results imply that similar mechanisms are occurring in the human liver to promote graft acceptance as in the experimental models of liver transplantation and suggest that strategies that promote liver transplant acceptance in rodents might be applicable to humans.
Resumo:
The clinical outcome of patients who have undergone liver transplantation for hereditary hemochromatosis (HH) or who have received iron-loaded donor grafts is unclear. We reviewed 3,600 adult primary orthotopic liver transplants and assessed the outcomes in 22 patients with HH. We also evaluated graft function and iron mobilization in 12 recipients of iron-loaded donor grafts. All 22 subjects who received liver transplants for HH were male; 13 had other risk factors for liver disease. HH patients had comparatively poor outcomes following transplantation: survival at 1, 3, and 5 years posttransplantation were 72%, 62%, and 55%, respectively. Recurrent hepatocellular cancer was the most common cause of death. There was no convincing evidence of reaccumulation of iron in the grafted liver in HH; however, 1 subject demonstrated increased serum ferritin concentration and grade 2 hepatic siderosis. Liver iron stores were slow to mobilize in 7 of the 12 recipients of iron-loaded grafts. These recipients had appropriate early graft function, but 2 patients with heavy iron loading and increased hepatic iron developed hepatic fibrosis. In conclusion. (1) HH is an uncommon indication for liver transplantation, and the majority of patients requiring transplantation had other risk factors for chronic liver disease; (2) reaccumulation of liver iron in HH patients is very unusual, but increased iron stores may be slow to mobilize in normal recipients of iron-loaded grafts, potentially compromising late graft function; (3) post-liver transplant survival is reduced in HH, and affected patients require careful clinical evaluation of perioperative and postoperative risk factors. Our data suggest that iron excess in HH does not wholly depend on intestinal iron absorption but is also influenced by liver factors that moderate iron metabolism.
Resumo:
Given that an important functional attribute of stem cells in vivo is their ability to sustain tissue regeneration, we set out to establish a simple and easy technique to assess this property from candidate populations of human keratinocyte stem cells in an in vivo setting. Keratinocytes were inoculated into devitalized rat tracheas and transplanted subcutaneously into SCID mice, and the epithelial lining regenerated characterized to establish the validity of this heterotypic model. Furthermore, the rate and quality of epidermal tissue reconstitution obtained from freshly isolated unfractionated vs. keratinocyte stem cell-enriched populations was tested as a function of (a) cell numbers inoculated; and (b) the inclusion of irradiated support keratinocytes and dermal cells. Rapid and sustained epidermal tissue regeneration from small numbers of freshly isolated human keratinocyte stem cells validates the utilization of this simple and reliable model system to assay for enrichment of epidermal tissue-reconstituting cells.
Resumo:
Achieving adequate therapeutic levels of immunosuppressive medications is important in rejection prevention. This study examined exposure to mycophenolic acid (MPA) in kidney transplant patients within the first 5 days posttransplantation. Methods. This single-center, nonrandomized study of first solitary kidney allograft recipients receiving cyclosporine (n = 116) or tacrolimus (n = 50) included patients who received either 1 g or 1.5 g of mycophenolate mofetil twice daily starting postoperatively. Exposure to MPA was measured at days 3 and 5 posttransplant using published limited sampling time equations. Results. There were no significant differences in exposure in the cyclosporine-treated patients receiving 3-g (n = 22) compared to 2-g (n = 94) daily doses (AUC([0-12]) 33.8 +/- 10.0 mg*h/L versus 30.1 +/- 9.7 mg*h/L, P =.20, respectively). About half the patients in both groups had AUC([0-12]) < 30 mg*h/L on days 3 and 5 posttransplant. On the other hand, there was significantly greater exposure on day 3 in the tacrolimus-treated patients receiving 3 g (n = 21) compared to 2 g (n = 29) daily (AUC([0-12]) 43.1 +/- 9.0 mg*h/L versus 36.8 +/- 11.1 mg*h/L, P =.016, respectively). On day 3 one (4.8%) patient receiving 3 g had an AUC([0-12]) of < 30 mg*h/L; whereas, eight (27.5%) receiving 2 g were below this level (P =.068). The AUC([0-12]) levels were not different on day 5. Conclusions. Loading with higher doses of mycophenolate mofetil results in greater exposure and a trend toward more patients in the therapeutic window within the first week for tacrolimus- but not for cyclosporine-treated patients.
Resumo:
Objectives: The aim of the study was to characterise the population pharmacokinetics (popPK) properties of itraconazole (ITRA) and its active metabolite hydroxy-ITRA in a representative paediatric population of cystic fibrosis (CF) and bone marrow transplant (BMT) patients. The goals were to determine the relative bioavailability between the two oral formulations, and to explore improved dosage regimens in these patients. Methods: All paediatric patients with CF taking oral ITRA for the treatment of allergic bronchopulmonary aspergillosis and patients undergoing BMT who were taking ITRA for prophylaxis of any fungal infection were eligible for the study. A minimum of two blood samples were drawn after the capsules and also after switching to oral solution, or vice versa. ITRA and hydroxy-ITRA plasma concentrations were measured by HPLC[1]. A nonlinear mixed-effect modelling approach (NONMEM 5.1.1) was used to describe the PK of ITRA and hydroxy-ITRA simultaneously. Simulations were used to assess dosing strategies in these patients. Results: Forty-nine patients (29CF, 20 BMT) were recruited to the study who provided 227 blood samples for the population analysis. A 1-compartment model with 1st order absorption and elimination best described ITRA kinetics, with 1st order conversion to hydroxy-ITRA. For ITRA, the apparent clearance (ClItra/F) and volume of distribution (Vitra/F) was 35.5L/h and 672L, respectively; the absorption rate constant for the capsule formulation was 0.0901 h-1 and for the oral solution formulation it was 0.959 h-1. The capsule comparative bioavailability (vs. solution) was 0.55. For hydroxy-ITRA, the apparent volume of distribution and clearance were 10.6 L and 5.28 L/h, respectively. Of several screened covariates only allometrically scaled total body weight significantly improved the fit to the data. No difference between the two populations was found. Conclusion: The developed popPK model adequately described the pharmacokinetics of ITRA and hydroxy-ITRA in paediatric patients with CF and patients undergoing BMT. High inter-patient variability confirmed previous data in CF[2], leukaemia and BMT[3] patients. From the population model, simulations showed the standard dose (5 mg/kg/day) needs to be doubled for the solution formulation and even 4 times more given of the capsules to achieve an adequate target therapeutic trough plasma concentration of 0.5 mg/L[4] in these patients.