Autor: |
Salisbury EM; Section of Immunobiology, Division of Immunology and Inflammation, Department of Medicine, Faculty of Medicine, Imperial College London, Sir Alexander Fleming Building, South Kensington Campus, Exhibition Road, London, SW7 2AZ, UK, emmasalisbury@doctors.org.uk., Game DS, Lechler RI |
Jazyk: |
angličtina |
Zdroj: |
Pediatric nephrology (Berlin, Germany) [Pediatr Nephrol] 2014 Dec; Vol. 29 (12), pp. 2263-72. Date of Electronic Publication: 2013 Nov 10. |
DOI: |
10.1007/s00467-013-2659-5 |
Abstrakt: |
Although transplantation has been a standard medical practice for decades, marked morbidity from the use of immunosuppressive drugs and poor long-term graft survival remain important limitations in the field. Since the first solid organ transplant between the Herrick twins in 1954, transplantation immunology has sought to move away from harmful, broad-spectrum immunosuppressive regimens that carry with them the long-term risk of potentially life-threatening opportunistic infections, cardiovascular disease, and malignancy, as well as graft toxicity and loss, towards tolerogenic strategies that promote long-term graft survival. Reports of "transplant tolerance" in kidney and liver allograft recipients whose immunosuppressive drugs were discontinued for medical or non-compliant reasons, together with results from experimental models of transplantation, provide the proof-of-principle that achieving tolerance in organ transplantation is fundamentally possible. However, translating the reconstitution of immune tolerance into the clinical setting is a daunting challenge fraught with the complexities of multiple interacting mechanisms overlaid on a background of variation in disease. In this article, we explore the basic science underlying mechanisms of tolerance and review the latest clinical advances in the quest for transplantation tolerance. |
Databáze: |
MEDLINE |
Externí odkaz: |
|