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Short-term therapy with anti-ICAM-1 monoclonal antibody induced long-term liver allograft survival in nonhuman primates

Cited 4 time in Web of Science Cited 6 time in Scopus
Authors

Hong, Suk Kyun; Han, Dongkyu; Lee, Sun-Kyung; Kim, Jiyeon; Hwang, Eung-Soo; Kim, Haeryoung; Lee, Jae-Il; Hong, Kwangpyo; Han, Eui Soo; Cho, Jae-Hyung; Lee, Jeong-Moo; Choi, YoungRok; Lee, Kwang-Woong; Yi, Nam-Joon; Yang, Jaeseok; Suh, Kyung-Suk

Issue Date
2021-09
Publisher
Blackwell Publishing Inc.
Citation
American Journal of Transplantation, Vol.21 No.9, pp.2978-2991
Abstract
Tolerance induction remains challenging following liver transplantation and the long-term use of immunosuppressants, especially calcineurin inhibitors, leads to serious complications. We aimed to test an alternative immunosuppressant, a chimeric anti-ICAM-1 monoclonal antibody, MD-3, for improving the outcomes of liver transplantation. We used a rhesus macaque liver transplantation model and monkeys were divided into three groups: no immunosuppression (n = 2), conventional immunosuppression (n = 4), and MD-3 (n = 5). Without immunosuppression, liver allografts failed within a week by acute rejection. Sixteen-week-long conventional immunosuppression that consisted of prednisolone, tacrolimus, and an mTOR inhibitor prolonged liver allograft survival; however, recipients died of acute T cell-mediated rejection (day 52), chronic rejection (days 62 and 66), or adverse effects of mTOR inhibitor (day 32). In contrast, 12-week-long MD-3 therapy with transient conventional immunosuppression in the MD-3 group significantly prolonged the survival of liver allograft recipients (5, 96, 216, 412, 730 days; p = .0483). MD-3 effectively suppressed intragraft inflammatory cell infiltration, anti-donor T cell responses, and donor-specific antibody with intact anti-cytomegalovirus antibody responses. However, this regimen ended in chronic rejection. In conclusion, short-term therapy with MD-3 markedly improved liver allograft survival to 2 years without maintenance of immunosuppressant. MD-3 is therefore a promising immune-modulating agent for liver transplantation.
ISSN
1600-6135
URI
https://hdl.handle.net/10371/209336
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1111/ajt.16486
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