TY - JOUR
T1 - Quadruple immunosuppression in a pig model of small bowel transplantation
AU - Gruessner, Rainer W.G.
AU - Fasola, Carlos
AU - Fryer, Jon
AU - Nakhleh, Raouf E.
AU - Kim, Sung
AU - Gruessner, Angelika C.
AU - Beebe, David
AU - Moon, Chul
AU - Troppmann, Christoph
AU - Najarian, John S.
PY - 1996/2/15
Y1 - 1996/2/15
N2 - Rejection remains a major obstacle to successful small bowel transplantation in humans, irrespective of the immunosuppressants. Previous large animal studies have not used quadruple immunosuppression (with high- dose intravenous cyclosporine A [CSA]) for induction, followed by triple immunosuppression for maintenance therapy. Nor have immunosuppressive doses been comparable to clinical solid organ transplants. We studied, in 78 nonrelated outbred pigs, the effect of quadruple immunosuppression (including horse anti-pig thymocyte globulin [ATG] and high-dose intravenous CSA) on the incidence and severity of rejection in the early, critical posttransplant period. Group A (n = 19) pigs were nonimmunosuppressed. Group B (n = 20) received quadruple immunosuppression: pig ATG (10 mg/kg/day x 10 days), intravenous CSA (3.0 mg/kg/day), prednisolone (2 mg/kg/day), and azathioprine (2.5 mg/kg/day); prednisolone and azathioprine were each reduced by 50% on posttransplant Days 8 and 15. Trough CSA levels were ≥400 ng/ml for the first 7 days posttransplant, >200 ng/ml thereafter. Recipient pigs underwent resection of large and small bowel; orthotopic transplants (proximal duodenojejunostomy, distal ileostomy) were done with systemic vein drainage. We developed a scoring system (no, mild, moderate, severe rejection) to grade the extent of both interstitial and vascular rejection; biopsies were obtained daily from the ileostomy. Rejection-free graft survival at posttransplant Days 7, 10, and 14 was 32, 26, and 16% in the nonimmunosuppressed group versus 95, 90, and 85% in the immunosuppressed group (P < 0.0001). Rejection grades were significantly better over the whole observation period in immunosuppressed pigs: interstitial rejection was not present in up to 67% of all daily biopsy specimens. Rejection was present in all specimens of nonimmunosuppressed pigs. Vascular rejection was uncommon (incidence < 10%) in both groups. Isolated vascular rejection without interstitial rejection was not found. Graft-versus-host reaction was noted in both groups in the skin only; liver and native bowel were not involved. We conclude that quadruple immunosuppression with pig ATG and high-dose intravenous CSA for induction effectively prevents moderate and severe rejection in this model. Since clinical transplant complications (rejection, lymphomas) have persisted under FK 506 treatment, our immunosuppressive regimen should be considered an alternative for bowel transplantation in humans to prevent early rejection.
AB - Rejection remains a major obstacle to successful small bowel transplantation in humans, irrespective of the immunosuppressants. Previous large animal studies have not used quadruple immunosuppression (with high- dose intravenous cyclosporine A [CSA]) for induction, followed by triple immunosuppression for maintenance therapy. Nor have immunosuppressive doses been comparable to clinical solid organ transplants. We studied, in 78 nonrelated outbred pigs, the effect of quadruple immunosuppression (including horse anti-pig thymocyte globulin [ATG] and high-dose intravenous CSA) on the incidence and severity of rejection in the early, critical posttransplant period. Group A (n = 19) pigs were nonimmunosuppressed. Group B (n = 20) received quadruple immunosuppression: pig ATG (10 mg/kg/day x 10 days), intravenous CSA (3.0 mg/kg/day), prednisolone (2 mg/kg/day), and azathioprine (2.5 mg/kg/day); prednisolone and azathioprine were each reduced by 50% on posttransplant Days 8 and 15. Trough CSA levels were ≥400 ng/ml for the first 7 days posttransplant, >200 ng/ml thereafter. Recipient pigs underwent resection of large and small bowel; orthotopic transplants (proximal duodenojejunostomy, distal ileostomy) were done with systemic vein drainage. We developed a scoring system (no, mild, moderate, severe rejection) to grade the extent of both interstitial and vascular rejection; biopsies were obtained daily from the ileostomy. Rejection-free graft survival at posttransplant Days 7, 10, and 14 was 32, 26, and 16% in the nonimmunosuppressed group versus 95, 90, and 85% in the immunosuppressed group (P < 0.0001). Rejection grades were significantly better over the whole observation period in immunosuppressed pigs: interstitial rejection was not present in up to 67% of all daily biopsy specimens. Rejection was present in all specimens of nonimmunosuppressed pigs. Vascular rejection was uncommon (incidence < 10%) in both groups. Isolated vascular rejection without interstitial rejection was not found. Graft-versus-host reaction was noted in both groups in the skin only; liver and native bowel were not involved. We conclude that quadruple immunosuppression with pig ATG and high-dose intravenous CSA for induction effectively prevents moderate and severe rejection in this model. Since clinical transplant complications (rejection, lymphomas) have persisted under FK 506 treatment, our immunosuppressive regimen should be considered an alternative for bowel transplantation in humans to prevent early rejection.
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U2 - 10.1006/jsre.1996.0114
DO - 10.1006/jsre.1996.0114
M3 - Article
C2 - 8769976
AN - SCOPUS:0030038505
SN - 0022-4804
VL - 61
SP - 260
EP - 266
JO - Journal of Surgical Research
JF - Journal of Surgical Research
IS - 1
ER -