Immunosuppression for liver transplantation in HCV-infected patients: Mechanism-based principles

被引:32
作者
Eghtesad, B
Fung, JJ
Demetris, AJ
Murase, N
Ness, R
Bass, DC
Gray, EA
Shakil, O
Flynn, B
Marcos, A
Starzl, TE
机构
[1] Univ Pittsburgh, Med Ctr, Thomas E Starzl Transplantat Inst, Pittsburgh, PA USA
[2] Univ Pittsburgh, Med Ctr, Dept Surg, Pittsburgh, PA USA
[3] Univ Pittsburgh, Med Ctr, Dept Pathol, Pittsburgh, PA USA
[4] Univ Pittsburgh, Med Ctr, Dept Epidemiol, Pittsburgh, PA USA
[5] Univ Pittsburgh, Med Ctr, Dept Med, Pittsburgh, PA USA
关键词
D O I
10.1002/lt.20536
中图分类号
R57 [消化系及腹部疾病];
学科分类号
摘要
We retrospectively analyzed 42 hepatitis C virus (HCV)-infected patients who underwent cadaveric liver transplantation under two strategies of immunosuppression: (1) daily tacrolimus (TAC) throughout and an initial cycle of high-dose prednisone (PRED) with subsequent gradual steroid weaning, or (2) intraoperative antithymocyte globulin (ATG) and daily TAC that was later space weaned. After 36 +/- 4 months, patient and graft survival in the first group was 18/19 (94.7%) with no examples of clinically serious HCV recurrence. In the second group, the three-year patient survival was 12/23 (52%), an graft survival was 9/23 (39%); accelerated recurrent hepatitis was the principal cause of the poor results. The data were interpreted in the context of a recently proposed immunologic paradigm that is equally applicable to transplantation and viral immunity. In the framework of this paradigm, the disparate hepatitis outcomes reflected different equilibria reached under the two immunosuppression regimens between the relative kinetics of viral distribution (systemically and in the liver) and the slowly recovering HCV-specific T-cell response. As a corollary, the aims of treatment of the HCV-infected liver recipients should be to predict, monitor, and equilibrate beneficial balances between virus distribution and the absence of an immunopathologic antiviral T-cell response. In this view, favorable equilibria were accomplished in the nonweaned group of patients but not in the weaned group. In conclusion, since the anti-HCV response is unleashed when immunosuppression is weaned, treatment protocols that minimize disease recurrence in HCV-infected allograft recipients must balance the desire to reduce immunosuppression or induce allotolerance with the need to prevent antiviral immunopathology.
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页码:1343 / 1352
页数:10
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