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Campath IH allows low-dose cyclosporine monotherapy in 31 cadaveric renal allograft recipients.

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TLDR
This novel therapy is of equal efficacy compared to conventional triple therapy, but allows the patient to be steroid-free and to be maintained on very-low-dose immunosuppressive monotherapy, which resulted in acceptable outcomes in this group of renal allograft recipients.
Abstract
Background. Campath 1H is a depleting, humanized anti-CD52 monoclonal antibody that has now been used in 31 renal allograft recipients. The results have been very encouraging and are presented herein. Methods. Campath 1H was administered, intravenously, in a dose of 20 mg, on day 0 and day 1 after renal transplant. Low-dose cyclosporine (Neoral) was then initiated at 72 hr after transplant. These patients were maintained on low-dose monotherapy with cyclosporine. Results. At present, the mean follow-up is 21 months (range: 15-28 months). All but one patient are alive and 29 have intact functioning grafts. There have been six separate episodes of steroid-responsive rejection. One patient has had a recurrence of her original disease. Two patients have suffered from opportunistic infections, which responded to therapy. One patient has died secondary to ischemic cardiac failure. Conclusions. Campath 1H has resulted in acceptable outcomes in this group of renal allograft recipients. This novel therapy is of equal efficacy compared to conventional triple therapy, but allows the patient to be steroid-free and to be maintained on very-low-dose immunosuppressive monotherapy.

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Strategies to improve long-term outcomes after renal transplantation.

TL;DR: Current antirejection therapy, including calcineurin blockers such as cyclosporine and tacrolimus, the interleukin-2 signal-transduction inhibitor sirolimus and the purine-synthesis inhibitor mycophenolate mofetil are discussed, which inhibits the proliferation of T cells and B cells.
Journal ArticleDOI

Immunocompetent T-cells with a memory-like phenotype are the dominant cell type following antibody-mediated T-cell depletion.

TL;DR: In this article, the authors evaluated the characteristics of post-depletional T cells with alemtuzumab or rabbit anti-thymocyte globulin following renal transplantation, evaluating the phenotype and functional characteristics of their residual cells.
Journal ArticleDOI

Immunosuppressive agents in solid organ transplantation: Mechanisms of action and therapeutic efficacy.

TL;DR: An overview of the different immunosuppressive agents currently used in solid organ transplantation is provided and many of the key clinical trials that underpin current clinical usage of these agents are described and side-effects are highlighted.
Journal ArticleDOI

Alemtuzumab Induction in Renal Transplantation

TL;DR: By the first year after transplantation, biopsy-confirmed acute rejection was less frequent with alemtuzumab than with conventional therapy, but among high-risk patients, no significant difference was seen between alemTuzumAB and rabbit antithymocyte globulin, and among high/low immunologic risk patients, the apparent superiority of alem Tuzumabs was restricted to patients at low risk for transplant rejection.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Induction of Immunological Tolerance by Porcine Liver Allografts

TL;DR: It is suggested that allogeneic liver can induce immunological tolerance in immunologically mature pigs and help protect donor specific tissue from rejection.
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Remission induction in non-hodgkin lymphoma with reshaped human monoclonal antibody campath-1h

TL;DR: A genetically reshaped human IgG1 monoclonal antibody (CAMPATH-1H) was used to treat two patients with non-Hodgkin lymphoma and might have an important use in the treatment of lymphoproliferative disorders and additionally as an immunosuppressive agent.
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FN18-CRM9 immunotoxin promotes tolerance in primate renal allografts.

TL;DR: All monkeys with T-cell depletion by immunotoxin had prolonged allograft survival, and tolerance confirmed by skin grafting has been confirmed in five of six long-surviving recipients.
Journal ArticleDOI

The essential roles of parenchymal tissues and passenger leukocytes in the tolerance induced by liver grafting in rats

TL;DR: It is demonstrated here, using normal and chimaeric rat liver grafts, that both the allogeneic liver parenchyma and the intrahepatic leukocytes of donor type contribute to the establishment of long-term tolerance, each component being essential and complementary.
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