Mortality After Steroid-Resistant Acute Cellular Rejection and Chronic Rejection Episodes in Adult Intestinal Transplants: Report From a Single Center in Induction/Preconditioning Era

Abstract Steroid-resistant acute cellular rejection (ACR) and chronic rejection (CR) are still major concerns after intestinal transplantation. We report our experience from a single center on 48 adults recipients using 49 grafts from 2001 to 2011, immunosuppressing them initially with daclizumab in...

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Veröffentlicht in:Transplantation proceedings 2013-06, Vol.45 (5), p.2032-2033
Hauptverfasser: Lauro, A, Bagni, A, Zanfi, C, Pellegrini, S, Dazzi, A, Del Gaudio, M, Ravaioli, M, Di Simone, M, Ramacciato, G, Pironi, L, Pinna, A.D
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Abstract Steroid-resistant acute cellular rejection (ACR) and chronic rejection (CR) are still major concerns after intestinal transplantation. We report our experience from a single center on 48 adults recipients using 49 grafts from 2001 to 2011, immunosuppressing them initially with daclizumab initially and later Alemtuzumab. Overall patient survival was 41.9% at 10 years while graft survival was 38.5%. The steroid-resistant ACR population of 14 recipients (28.5%) experienced 50% mortality mainly due to sepsis, while the five (8%) CR recipients, included two survivors. All but 1 graft was placed without a liver. CR was often preceded by ACR episodes. Mortality related to steroid-resistant ACR and CR still affects the intestinal transplant population despite induction/preconditioning, especially in the absence of a protective liver effect of the liver. New immunosuppressive strategies are needed.
ISSN:0041-1345
1873-2623
DOI:10.1016/j.transproceed.2012.09.124