Tolerance after liver transplantation: Where are we?

被引:58
作者
Feng, Sandy [1 ]
Bucuvalas, John [2 ]
机构
[1] Univ Calif San Francisco, Dept Surg, Div Transplantat, 505 Parnassus Ave, San Francisco, CA 94143 USA
[2] Univ Cincinnati, Cincinnati Childrens Hosp, Div Gastroenterol Hepatol & Nutr, Cincinnati, OH USA
关键词
RANDOMIZED CONTROLLED-TRIAL; LONG-TERM SURVIVORS; IMMUNOSUPPRESSION WITHDRAWAL; OPERATIONAL TOLERANCE; FOLLOW-UP; GRAFT FIBROSIS; ALLOGRAFT DYSFUNCTION; HLA ALLOANTIBODIES; NATURAL-HISTORY; RECIPIENTS;
D O I
10.1002/lt.24845
中图分类号
R57 [消化系及腹部疾病];
学科分类号
摘要
Impeccable management of immunosuppression is required to ensure the best longterm outcomes for liver transplant recipients. This is particularly challenging for children who arguably need 8 decades of graft and patient survival. Too little risks chronic, often subclinical allo-immune injury while too much risks insidious and cumulative toxicities. Historically, immunosuppression minimization or withdrawal has been a strategy to optimize the longevity of liver transplant recipients. The literature is sprinkled with single-center reports of operationally tolerant patients - those with apparently normal liver function and liver tests. However, without biopsy evidence of immunological quiescence, confidence in the phenotypic assignment of tolerance is shaky. More recently, multicenter trials of immunosuppression withdrawal for highly selected, stable, longterm adult and pediatric liver recipients have shown tolerance rates, based on both biochemical and histological assessment, of 40% and 60%, respectively. Extended biochemical and histologic follow-up of children over 8 years, equivalent to 7+ years off of drug, suggests that operational tolerance is robust. Therefore, clearly, immunosuppression can be completely and safety withdrawn from highly-selected subsets of adults and children. However, these trials have also confirmed that clinically ideal recipients - those eligible for immunosuppression withdrawal trial - can harbor significant and worrisome inflammation and/or fibrosis. Although the etiology and prognosis of these findings remain unknown, it is reasonable to surmise that they may reflect an anti-donor immune response that is insufficiently controlled. To achieve the outcomes that we are seeking and that our patients are demanding, we desperately need noninvasive but accurate biomarkers that identify whether immunosuppression is neither too much nor too little but just right. Until these are available, liver histology remains the gold standard to assess allograft health and guide immunosuppression management. Liver Transplantation 23 1601-1614 2017 AASLD.
引用
收藏
页码:1601 / 1614
页数:14
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