Cell therapeutic approaches to immunosuppression after clinical kidney transplantation

C Morath, A Schmitt, F Kälble, M Zeier, M Schmitt… - Pediatric …, 2018 - Springer
C Morath, A Schmitt, F Kälble, M Zeier, M Schmitt, F Sandra-Petrescu, G Opelz, P Terness…
Pediatric Nephrology, 2018Springer
Refinement of immunosuppressive strategies has led to further improvement of kidney graft
survival in recent years. Currently, the main limitations to long-term graft survival are life-
threatening side effects of immunosuppression and chronic allograft injury, emphasizing the
need for innovative immunosuppressive regimens that resolve this therapeutic dilemma.
Several cell therapeutic approaches to immunosuppression and donor-specific
unresponsiveness have been tested in early phase I and phase II clinical trials in kidney …
Abstract
Refinement of immunosuppressive strategies has led to further improvement of kidney graft survival in recent years. Currently, the main limitations to long-term graft survival are life-threatening side effects of immunosuppression and chronic allograft injury, emphasizing the need for innovative immunosuppressive regimens that resolve this therapeutic dilemma. Several cell therapeutic approaches to immunosuppression and donor-specific unresponsiveness have been tested in early phase I and phase II clinical trials in kidney transplantation. The aim of this overview is to summarize current cell therapeutic approaches to immunosuppression in clinical kidney transplantation with a focus on myeloid suppressor cell therapy by mitomycin C-induced cells (MICs). MICs show great promise as a therapeutic agent to achieve the rapid and durable establishment of donor-unresponsiveness in living-donor kidney transplantation. Cell-based therapeutic approaches may eventually revolutionize immunosuppression in kidney transplantation in the near future.
Springer