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Alemtuzumab Induction (alemtuzumab + induction)
Selected AbstractsAlemtuzumab Induction Prior to Cardiac Transplantation with Lower Intensity Maintenance Immunosuppression: One-Year OutcomesAMERICAN JOURNAL OF TRANSPLANTATION, Issue 2 2010J. J. Teuteberg Induction therapy with alemtuzumab (C-1H) prior to cardiac transplantation (CTX) may allow for lower intensity maintenance immunosuppression. This is a retrospective study of patients who underwent CTX at a single institution from January 2001 until April 2009 and received no induction versus induction with C-1H on a background of tacrolimus and mycophenolate. Those with C-1H received dose-reduced calcineurin inhibitor and no steroids. A total of 220 patients were included, 110 received C-1H and 110 received no induction. Recipient baseline characteristics, donor age and gender were not different between the two groups. Mean tacrolimus levels (ng/mL) for C-1H versus no induction: months 1,3 (8.5 vs. 12.9), month 4,6 (10.2 vs. 13.0), month 7,9 (10.2 vs. 11.9) and month 10,12 (9.9 vs. 11.3) were all significantly lower for the C-1H group, p < 0.001. There were no differences between the C-1H and no induction groups at 12 months for overall survival 85.1% versus 93.6% p = 0.09, but freedom from significant rejection was significantly higher for the C-1H group, 84.5% versus 51.6%, p < 0.0001. In conclusion, induction therapy after CTX with C-1H results in a similar 12 month survival, but a greater freedom from rejection despite lower calcineurin levels and without the use of steroids. [source] Two Hundred Living Donor Kidney Transplantations Under Alemtuzumab Induction and Tacrolimus Monotherapy: 3-Year Follow-UpAMERICAN JOURNAL OF TRANSPLANTATION, Issue 2 2009H. P. Tan Alemtuzumab has been used in off-label studies of solid organ transplantation. We extend our report of the first 200 consecutive living donor solitary kidney transplantations under alemtuzumab pretreatment with tacrolimus monotherapy and subsequent spaced weaning to 3 years of follow-up. We focused especially on the causes of recipient death and graft loss, and the characteristics of rejection. The actuarial 1-, 2- and 3-year patient and graft survivals were 99.0% and 98.0%, 96.4% and 90.8% and 93.3% and 86.3%, respectively. The cumulative incidence of acute cellular rejection (ACR) at the following months was 2%,6, 9.0%,12, 16.5%,18, 19.5%,24, 23.5%,30, 24.0%,36 and 25%,42. The mean serum creatinine (mg/dL) and glomerular filtration rate (mL/min/1.73 m2) at 1 and 3 years were 1.4 ± 0.6 and 58.7 ± 21.6 and 1.5 ± 0.7 and 54.9 ± 20.9, respectively. Fifty (25%) recipients had a total of 89 episodes of ACR. About 88.7% of ACR episodes were Banff 1, and of those, 82% were steroid-sensitive. Nine (4.5%) recipients had antibody-mediated rejection (AMR). About 76.5% were weaned but only 46% are currently on spaced dose (qod or less) tacrolimus monotherapy, and 94.4% remained steroid-free from the time of transplantation. Infectious complications were uncommon. This experience suggests the 3-year efficacy of this approach. [source] Alemtuzumab Induction and Sirolimus Plus Mycophenolate Mofetil Maintenance for CNI and Steroid-Free Kidney Transplant ImmunosuppressionAMERICAN JOURNAL OF TRANSPLANTATION, Issue 12 2005S. M. Flechner We performed a pilot study in which 22 kidney recipients (14 LD: 8 DCD) were given alemtuzumab induction (30 mg day 0 and 1), steroids (500 mg mp day 0 and 1, none thereafter), mycophenolate mofetil (MMF) maintenance (500 mg b.i.d) and sirolimus (concentration controlled 8,12 ng/mL). With a mean follow-up of 15.9 months, patient survival is (21/22) 96% and graft survival (19/22) 87%. Acute rejections occurred in (8) 36.3% (two humoral). Of 19 surviving grafts, 18 (95%) remain steroid and 15 (79%) CNI-free. At 1 year, mean creatinine was 1.43 mg/dL. Overall infection rates were low, but 2 patients developed severe acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) at month 3 and 7, respectively, resulting in mortality in one and a graft loss in the other. No cancer or PTLD was observed. Leukopenia was common and MMF dose was reduced or eliminated in 6/22 (27%) patients. The reported higher than expected rate of acute rejection, leukopenia and possible pulmonary toxicity suggests excessive morbidity. Modifications such as an initial period of CNI use should be considered. [source] Early and Limited Use of Tacrolimus to Avoid Rejection in an Alemtuzumab and Sirolimus Regimen for Kidney Transplantation: Clinical Results and Immune MonitoringAMERICAN JOURNAL OF TRANSPLANTATION, Issue 5 2009S. J. Knechtle Alemtuzumab induction with 60 days of tacrolimus treatment and continuous sirolimus treatment prevented acute rejection in nine of 10 consecutive renal allograft recipients. All patients are alive with a functioning kidney graft at 27,39 months of follow-up. Extensive immune monitoring was performed in all patients. Alloantibody detection, cytokine kinetics assay (CKA), and trans vivo delayed-type hypersensitivity (DTH) assay were performed every 6 months showing correlation with clinical evolution. Despite alloantibody presence in five patients, eight patients remain without the need for specific treatment and only sirolimus monotherapy in decreasing dosage. Four patients take only 1 mg sirolimus daily with levels of 3,4 ng/mL. One patient showed clinical signs of rejection at month 9 post-transplant, with slow increase in serum creatinine and histological signs of mixed cellular (endarteritis) and humoral rejection (C4d positivity in peritubular capillaries and donor-specific antibody (DSA)). In summary, the addition of tacrolimus therapy for 2 months to a steroid-free, alemtuzumab induction and sirolimus maintenance protocol limited the previously shown acute rejection development. Nevertheless, alloantibody was present in serum and/or C4d present on 1-year biopsy in half the patients. The combination of CKA and DSA monitoring or the performance of transvivo DTH correlated with immune status of the patients. [source] Homeostatic Repopulation by CD28,CD8+ T Cells in Alemtuzumab-Depleted Kidney Transplant Recipients Treated With Reduced ImmunosuppressionAMERICAN JOURNAL OF TRANSPLANTATION, Issue 2 2008P. Trzonkowski Alemtuzumab (CAMPATH-1H) is a depleting agent introduced recently in transplantation and often used with reduced maintenance immunosuppression. In the current study we investigated the immune response of 13 kidney allograft recipients treated with alemtuzumab followed by weaned immunosuppression with reduced dose of mycophenolate mofetil (MMF) and tacrolimus. Tacrolimus was switched to sirolimus at 6 months and MMF withdrawn at 12 months after transplantation. We found that after alemtuzumab induction the recovery of CD8+ T cells was much faster than that of CD4+ T cells. It was complete 6 months posttransplant while CD4+ T cells did not fully recover even 15 months posttransplant. Repopulating CD8+ T cells were mainly of immunosenescent CD28,CD8+ phenotype. In a series of in vitro experiments we showed that CD28,CD8+ T cells might suppress proliferation of CD4+ T cells. There were three successfully treated acute rejections during the study (first at +70 day, two others +12 months) that occurred in patients with the lowest level of CD28,CD8+ T cells. We hypothesize that expanded CD28,CD8+ T cells might compete for ,immune space' with CD4+ T cells suppressing their proliferation and therefore delaying CD4+ T-cells recovery. This delay might be associated with the clinical outcome as CD4+ T cells, notably CD4+ T effector memory cells, were shown to be associated with rejection. [source] Alemtuzumab Induction and Sirolimus Plus Mycophenolate Mofetil Maintenance for CNI and Steroid-Free Kidney Transplant ImmunosuppressionAMERICAN JOURNAL OF TRANSPLANTATION, Issue 12 2005S. M. Flechner We performed a pilot study in which 22 kidney recipients (14 LD: 8 DCD) were given alemtuzumab induction (30 mg day 0 and 1), steroids (500 mg mp day 0 and 1, none thereafter), mycophenolate mofetil (MMF) maintenance (500 mg b.i.d) and sirolimus (concentration controlled 8,12 ng/mL). With a mean follow-up of 15.9 months, patient survival is (21/22) 96% and graft survival (19/22) 87%. Acute rejections occurred in (8) 36.3% (two humoral). Of 19 surviving grafts, 18 (95%) remain steroid and 15 (79%) CNI-free. At 1 year, mean creatinine was 1.43 mg/dL. Overall infection rates were low, but 2 patients developed severe acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) at month 3 and 7, respectively, resulting in mortality in one and a graft loss in the other. No cancer or PTLD was observed. Leukopenia was common and MMF dose was reduced or eliminated in 6/22 (27%) patients. The reported higher than expected rate of acute rejection, leukopenia and possible pulmonary toxicity suggests excessive morbidity. Modifications such as an initial period of CNI use should be considered. [source] A randomized trial of thymoglobulin vs. alemtuzumab (with lower dose maintenance immunosuppression) vs. daclizumab in renal transplantation at 24 months of follow-upCLINICAL TRANSPLANTATION, Issue 2 2008Gaetano Ciancio Abstract: Introduction: A long-term prospective randomized trial evaluating alemtuzumab, a humanized anti-CD52 monoclonal antibody, in a predominantly non-Caucasian population has yet to be reported. Methods: Ninety deceased donor (DD) first renal transplant recipients were randomized into three different antibody induction groups: group A, thymoglobulin (Thymo); group B, alemtuzumab; group C, daclizumab (Dac). In groups A and C, the target trough levels of tacrolimus were 8,10 ng/mL, mycophenolate mofetil (MMF) 1 g administered twice daily, and maintenance methylprednisolone. In group B, target tacrolimus trough levels were 4,7 ng/mL, 500 mg MMF administered twice-daily, without methylprednisolone. African-Americans and Hispanics comprised more than 50% in each group. Results: A minimum follow-up of 27 months showed no overall group differences in patient or graft survival (p = 0.89 and 0.66), but a trend towards worse death-censored graft survival in group B (p = 0.05). Acute rejection rates were not significantly different: six (20%), seven (23%), and seven (23%) in groups A, B, and C, respectively. The incidence of chronic allograft nephropathy was higher in group B than in A and C (p = 0.008). The mean calculated creatinine clearance at 24 months was 81.1 ± 5.5, 64.4 ± 4.5, and 80.7 ± 5.7 in groups A, B, and C, respectively (p = 0.01 for B vs. average of A and C). Conclusion: In this randomized 27-month minimum follow-up trial of predominantly non-Caucasian DD renal transplant recipients with alemtuzumab induction, lower maintenance tacrolimus, MMF, and steroid avoidance appear less effective than either Thymo or Dac with higher maintenance immunosuppression. [source] |