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New
approach to prevent Antibody-Mediated Damage
in Kidney Transplants
Newswise — Early results from a Mayo Clinic
(http://www.mayoclinic.org/transplantcenter-rst/)
research study demonstrate the effectiveness
of a new approach to blocking an important
part of the immune system that causes severe
damage to some kidney transplants.
Historically, these patients have been very
difficult to treat successfully because
their immune systems are already primed with
antibodies to destroy the donor organ
Results show that the drug under study,
called eculizumab, prevents
antibody-mediated kidney transplant
rejection by inhibiting the immune system’s
activation of one of the body’s important
defense mechanisms -- the complement system.
Antibody-mediated rejection is a major
barrier to transplant in patients with
antibodies against their living donors
sometimes called “positive crossmatch kidney
transplants.”
Though the results are preliminary and the
study is ongoing, Mayo Clinic’s lead author,
Mark Stegall, M.D. (http://www.mayoclinic.org/bio/12971332.html),
said the data suggest that eculizumab
therapy may be a turning point for this
select group of high risk kidney
transplantation patients.
“This innovative approach has the potential
to make this type of high risk transplant
possible for more people while improving
outcomes,” he says
Background
Positive crossmatch patients have antibodies
in their blood against foreign “tissue
types” that are present on donor kidneys.
These tissue types, termed Human Leukocyte
Antigens (HLA), are the reason the
transplant patient’s body perceives the
donated kidney as “non-self” tissue. These
antibodies result from previous transplants,
blood transfusions or pregnancies.
Increasingly recognized as a major problem,
high levels of these antibodies delay
transplantation, as evidenced by the
approximately 7,000 people on the United
Network for Organ Sharing (UNOS) kidney
waiting list who are still looking for a
match. Mayo Clinic has long been a leader in
devising innovative approaches to help this
challenging group of kidney patients, and
these latest findings about eculizumab add
to the expertise and options offered to
patients.
Significance of the Mayo Clinic research
This work suggests a novel way to block
antibody-mediated tissue injury. The Mayo
team showed that eculizumab blocks the part
of the immune system known as the complement
system, which initiates tissue destruction.
In this study, 10 positive crossmatch kidney
transplant patients were treated with
eculizumab. None of the treated patients
developed antibody-mediated rejection
compared to historical controls in which 60
percent with similar levels of antibody
would have developed antibody-mediated
rejection.
“These results are great news because they
mean that none of the treated patients
developed the most serious complication that
normally threatens the transplant. This
represents a quantum leap in this area,”
explains Dr. Stegall.
Research rationale
High levels of antibodies were once
considered an absolute contraindication to
kidney transplantation; however, Mayo Clinic
researchers and other groups have developed
new protocols to successfully overcome
antibody barriers -- mostly in the setting
of living donation. Without such protocols,
most of these patients would die without
ever receiving a kidney transplant.
Despite their general success, these
protocols, which have been in use for almost
a decade, have been complicated by a high
rate of antibody-mediated damage which can
lead to early graft injury that shortens the
lifespan of the transplant.
Preventing
antibody-mediated rejection has been
difficult. This new therapy may be a first
step toward improved outcomes in these
high-risk recipients.
Endothelial involvement
In addition to the 10-sample study in which
tissue destruction was prevented in all
patients, the Mayo team presented a related,
more detailed analysis of the ability of
eculizumab to prevent kidney damage at the
microscopic level.
This study involved 62 tissue biopsies from
50 kidney transplant patients. The biopsies
were analyzed using the electron microscope
for evidence of the mechanism and process of
tissue destruction.
Results showed that when acute
antibody-mediated rejection occurs, it
involves changes observable by electron
microscope in the endothelial cells lining
the kidney blood vessels. These changes
correspond with high levels of antibodies
against the donor circulating in the
patient’s blood serum.
And importantly, by blocking a specific part
of the immune system with eculizumab,
doctors prevented endothelial activation.
These results suggest the endothelial lining
may be a potential target for developing new
drugs to stop antibody-mediated tissue
destruction so that more positive crossmatch
patients can be successfully transplanted.
More research is needed to confirm these
findings.
Collaboration
The Mayo Clinic research team also included
Tayyab Diwan, M.D.; Justin Burns, M.D.;
Patrick Dean, M.D.; Lynn Cornell, M.D.;
Manish Gandhi, M.D.; Fernando Cosio, M.D.;
and James Gloor, M.D.
This research was funded by Alexion
Pharmaceuticals , Inc.
About Mayo Clinic
Mayo Clinic is the first and largest
integrated, not-for-profit group practice in
the world. Doctors from every medical
specialty work together to care for
patients, joined by common systems and a
philosophy of “the needs of the patient come
first.”
More than 3,300 physicians, scientists and
researchers and 46,000 allied health staff
work at Mayo Clinic, which has sites in
Rochester, Minn., Jacksonville, Fla., and
Scottsdale/Phoenix, Ariz. Collectively, the
three locations treat more than half a
million people each year.
To obtain the latest news releases from Mayo
Clinic, go to www.mayoclinic.org/news. For
information about research and education
visit
www.mayo.edu. MayoClinic.com (www.mayoclinic.com)
is available as a resource for your health
stories.
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