Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: EC:3.1.3.16 (calcineurin)
17,112 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Kidney transplantation is the best treatment for patients with end-stage renal disease, both in terms of survival benefit and quality of life. The major limitation is the continuing shortage of kidneys suitable for transplantation, reinforcing the need to maximise graft survival. After the first year of transplantation, chronic renal allograft dysfunction (CRAD) is the first cause of late graft deterioration and failure. CRAD has been defined as a progressive renal dysfunction, independent of acute rejection, drug toxicity and recurrent or de novo nephropathy, with features on biopsy of chronic allograft nephropathy (CAN) characterised by vascular intimal hyperplasia, tubular atrophy, interstitial fibrosis and chronic transplant glomerulopathy. Protocol biopsy-based studies have demonstrated a high and early prevalence of CAN lesions during the first year in patients with normal and stable renal function. Beyond 1 year, the injuries associated with calcineurin inhibitors (CNIs) appear to be very common. The physiopathology of CRAD is complex and multifactorial. Both alloantigen-dependent factors (acute rejection, HLA matching, donor-specific antibodies, inadequate immunosuppression) and alloantigen-independent factors (donor age, brain death, ischaemia/reperfusion injuries, hypertension, hyperlipidaemia, cytomegalovirus, CNI-related nephrotoxicity) are involved. Consequently, CRAD appears as a dynamic process, evolving with time, and immunosuppressive regimens need to be modulated in order to provide the most suitable treatment at the different phases of its natural history. On the basis of this scheme, the new paradigm would be the use of a CNI-based regimen during the period of maximal risk of (subclinical) acute rejection, followed by a conversion to a CNI-free regimen in order to avoid the long-term consequences of nephrotoxicity. Fortunately, new agents are being introduced in clinical practice providing a large range of combinations and allowing individualisation of immunosuppressive regimens. Large, prospective, multicentre trials are warranted, and the challenge is to define new endpoints of CRAD and to determine the best therapeutic strategy.
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PMID:Combating chronic renal allograft dysfunction : optimal immunosuppressive regimens. 1574 97

Chronic allograft nephropathy (CAN) is an anatomical and clinical alteration, characterized by proteinuria, hypertension and a progressive decline in kidney function, which begins at variable times (months, years) and can lead to the loss of the transplanted organ. CAN pathogenesis, which remains to be fully clarified, involves both immunological (early acute rejection, hyperimmunization, HLA-mismatches between donor and recipient, suboptimal immunosuppression, etc) and non-immunological factors (ischemia/reperfusion injury, reduced nephron mass, age differences between donor and recipient, dialysis time, hypertension, dislipidemia, proteinuria, etc). The possible prevention strategies for CAN consist of procedures aimed at the reduction of some potential risk factors: optimization of the conditions for organ explantation, diminution of ischemia/reperfusion injury, aggressive pharmacological treatment of acute rejection episodes, routine utilization of anti-hypertensive and hypolipidemic agents, and appropriate and rational immunosuppressive regimen. Moreover, some categories of immunosuppressive drugs, such as calcineurin inhibitors, can have a nephrotoxic effect, often regardless of therapeutic dosage. The introduction in clinical practice of novel immunosuppressive drugs with no nephrotoxicity, like mycophenolate mofetil and rapamycin, makes therapeutical strategies able to reduce the incidence of CAN feasible.
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PMID:[Therapy strategies in the prevention of chronic allograft nephropathy]. 1578

Chronic Allograft Nephropathy (CAN) is one of the most common cause of kidney transplant loss. CAN may be caused by immunologic as well as nonimmunologic factors which may interfere and increase response. Immunologic factors include acute rejection, degree of HLA mismatch, inadequate immunosuppression. Nonimmunologic factors contain delayed graft function, ischemia-reperfusion injury, nephrotoxicity of calcineurin inhibitors, hyperfiltration, hypertension and hyperlipidemia. The histopatological description of CAN may indicate two phases of injury. An initial phase by one year include tubulointerstitial infiltration in the late phase of CAN arteriolar hyalinosis and glomerulosclerosis were revealed. Modification of the immunosuppressive treatment with reduction or withdrawal of calcineurin inhibitors may prevent graft loss, while addition of nonnephrotoxic agents such as mycophenolate mofetil or sirolimus should be considered by the risk of acute rejection. Additionally effective management by hypertension and hyperlipidemia is essential.
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PMID:Chronic allograft nephropathy--immunologic and nonimmunologic factors. 1702 23

The treatment of autoimmune hepatitis is evolving as the pathogenic pathways that underlie the disease are defined, new immunosuppressive agents are tested, and site-specific molecular interventions become feasible. Prednisone alone or at a reduced dose combined with azathioprine is the conventional treatment. Patients with HLA genotype DRB1*0301 have a poorer treatment response and a more frequent need for liver transplantation than those with HLA genotype DRB1*0401. Therapy to the point when liver test results and histological findings are normal reduces, but does not eliminate, the occurrence of relapse. Treatment failure warrants reassessment with regard to the accuracy of the original diagnosis and the exclusion of variant forms of hepatitis or concomitant alternative diseases. Ciclosporin might be effective as short-term, front-line therapy in infants and adults, and calcineurin inhibitors might salvage patients who are refractory to corticosteroid regimens. Mycophenolate mofetil can induce an improvement in laboratory test results and reduce the requirement for corticosteroids. Sirolimus is effective for treatment of de novo autoimmune hepatitis that develops after liver transplantation. Synthetic peptides that block autoantigen presentation, cytokine manipulations, oral tolerance regimens, T-cell vaccination, and gene therapy are all interventions that will be able to emerge after a reliable animal model of the human disease has been developed.
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PMID:Current therapy for autoimmune hepatitis. 1740 88

In Belgium, kidney transplantation is currently the treatment of choice for a child with end-stage renal disease (ESRD). Dialysis remains the life-saving bridge to transplantation. Within the Eurotransplant (ET) community, Belgium represents 14% of the cadaveric transplantations and 22% of the living-related transplantation (LD) in children less than 16 years of age. Single-centre analysis (KUL) shows a patient survival of 94% at 3 year and 91% at 5 year. The overall graft survival is 82% at 3 year and 74% at 5 year. In the LD group, the graft survival rate is 10% better than the overall actuarial graft survival rate. Multivariate Cox regression analysis performed on all transplantations of one centre (KUL) demonstrate the following factors to be significant and independent predictors of poor graft outcome: absence of calcineurin inhibitors, two HLA- mismatches, duration of pre-transplant dialysis and creatinine clearance at one year after transplantation. The outcome improves by a short dialysis waiting time, the use of living-related donors, the prevention of delayed graft function (DGF), and of acute rejection. Within the ET community, the waiting child has priority compared to the adult, but if we want to avoid morbidity, waiting times must be shortened and the incidence of pre-emptive transplantation, which is currently 24% in Belgium, must increase. The good results with LD is certainly an attractive alternative to be actively encouraged for paediatric kidney recipients and the use of young deceased donors especially for children with ESRD must be supported since the results in terms of graft survival with these donors are very good, especially in children. In paediatric kidney transplantation the long-term graft survival is still the major challenge and has still to be documented by randomized trials. The success of the past, however, allows us to face the future with hope and confidence.
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PMID:Paediatric kidney transplantation in Belgium. 1838 59

Gingival overgrowth (GO) is the main oral manifestation in transplant recipients who use calcineurin inhibitors. In the present study, factors for GO development were investigated in Brazilian renal transplant recipients who were prescribed cyclosporine (CsA) or tacrolimus (TAC). Demographic, pharmacological, clinical, and periodontal data were obtained from 83 patients, as well as HLA expression in 51 of them. The prevalence of GO was high (47%), but its severity was low according to periodontal indices. The prevalence of GO was greater among patients who used CsA (n = 49) than those receiving used TAC (n = 34) namely, 61% versus 26.5% (P = .003). Comparisons between patients with versus without GO were performed independent of the administered immunossupressant. The group with GO showed a greater degree of gingival inflammation index. HLA-A68 had greater expression among patients without GO (P = .04). The risk factors for GO occurrence were evaluated using a multivariate analysis that identified gingival inflammation and HLA-A24 expression as risk factors. Increased age and use of TAC were identified as protective factors. GO showed a high prevalence, yet a light intensity. Patients who were younger, men, or received CsA showed a greater occurrence of GO. The risk factors identified for GO development were the presence of gingival inflammation and HLA-A24 expression.
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PMID:Gingival overgrowth in renal transplant recipients: a study concerning prevalence, severity, periodontal, and predisposing factors. 1858 22

We describe the case of a 24-year-old female with end-stage renal disease from focal segmental glomerulosclerosis (FSGS) diagnosed at age 16, who underwent monozygotic triplet transplantation at age 21 from her sister. Monozygosity was established by buccal smear DNA PCR amplification using short tandem repeat (1) profiling for 16 genetic alleles. All immunosuppression was discontinued by 1 month posttransplant. To evaluate the use of immunosuppression in HLA identical monozygotic transplantation, we interrogated the OPTN (Organ Procurement Transplant Network) database for all transplants conducted from 1987 to 2006. We identified 194 probable identical twin transplantations based on age, gender, race, ethnic category, blood type and HLA match. We evaluated the use of various immunosuppressive agents at discharge, 6 months and 1, 2 and 3 years after transplantation. Seventy-one percent of these patients at discharge and 34% at the end of 1 year were on immunosuppression. At discharge 61% received steroids and 30% received calcineurin inhibitors and 66% of these remained on calcineurin inhibitors at 1 year. Renal function was superior among those not maintained on immunosuppression. Thus, monozygotic transplantation confers an immunologic advantage that allows immunosuppression elimination despite a risk of recurrent glomerular disease such as FSGS with appropriate evaluation and management.
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PMID:Monozygotic transplantation: concerns and opportunities. 1880 9

While conversion of stable renal transplant recipients (RTR) from calcineurin inhibitors (CNI) to sirolimus (SRL) is safe and effective, it is still under investigation for recent, high-risk cases. We studied the long-term effects of conversion of high-risk subjects maintained on a CNI, mycophenolate mofetil, plus steroid regimen to SRL, mycophenolate mofetil, plus steroid on graft and patient outcomes. We retrospectively reviewed the first 100 RTR converted to SRL treatment over approximately 5 years. The main indications for conversion were biopsy-proven acute rejection (BPAR), CNI toxicity, CNI elimination, and acute-tubular necrosis (ATN). Exclusion criteria were limited to bone marrow suppression. The overall mean +/- SD age was 38.5 +/- 15.6 years, including pediatric and geriatric age groups. Mean +/- SD body mass index (BMI) was 28.99 +/- 8.0 and 40% had a BMI > 30. There were 40% RTR from deceased donors and 60% showed 4 to 6 HLA mismatches. Preconversion total BPAR and steroid-resistant rejection incidences were 35% and 14%, respectively. Mean +/- SD time to start of SRL was 11.9 +/- 22.8 months posttransplantation. Proteinuria > 2 g/d, leukopenia, and hyperlipidemia increased significantly after conversion (P = .001, P = .0003, and P = .0001, respectively). Patient and graft survivals were 95% and 90%, respectively. There was significant improvement in graft function postconversion (P < .0001). There was a high incidence of side effects and cases of SRL discontinuation. Multivariate analysis demonstrated the influence of bone marrow suppression, obesity, hyperlipidemia, nutritional status, proteinuria, and graft function on graft and patient outcomes. We concluded that conversion from CNI to SRL was effective among high-risk RTR, but with a high incidence of adverse events during long-term follow-up.
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PMID:Long-term follow-up of 100 high-risk renal transplant recipients converted from calcineurin inhibitors to sirolimus: a single center experience. 1954 4

Post-transplant lymphoproliferative disorders (PTLDs) represent a serious complication in solid organ transplantation and are the first cause of cancer related mortality in this population. Pre-transplant Epstein Barr Virus seronegativity and receipt of T cell depleting agents for induction or severe/refractory rejection are known risk factors, but they primarily impact early occurring disease. On the other hand, late occurring disease, which has typically not correlated with the above or other specific risk factors, has recently been shown to be associated with older recipient age and prolonged receipt of calcineurin inhibitors. Furthermore, recent data has contributed to and, in some instances shed light on, previous debate concerning the role of viruses other than EBV and the level of HLA mismatches as risk factors for PTLD. Gene association studies focusing on key cytokines and their receptors have identified several polymorphisms that may prove useful to identify patients at risk, with distinction for early and late occurring disease. Determining the influence of individual maintenance immunosuppressive agents on lymphomagenesis has been limited by the complexity of the multi-drug regimens used and absence of measures of drug exposure and time-dependent covariates in multivariable analyses. Biomarkers that measure the extent of immunosupression may have a role in avoiding PTLD, and other post-transplant complications.
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PMID:Post-transplant lymphoproliferative disease (PTLD): Pharmacological, virological and other determinants. 2105 3

Graft-versus-host disease (GvHD) remains one of the major complications after allogeneic stem cell transplantation (SCT) and is responsible for morbidity, mortality and decrease in quality of life of patients after SCT. The most important preventive approach is the selection of a donor with best possible HLA compatibility between donor and recipient. Basic prophylaxis of acute GvHD begins already prior to transplantation and usually consists of cyclosporine with or without methotrexate. In the past few years, many new therapies have been introduced for the treatment of acute and chronic GvHD. Extracorporeal photopheresis (ECP), for example, represents a promising treatment option for acute and chronic GvHD with very few side effects. For chronic GvHD mTOR inhibitors (sirolimus, everolimus) may replace calcineurin-inhibitors with the advantage of not inducing malignant skin tumors. Guidelines are available ort he management of acute and chronic GvHD. While pathophysiology, classification and skin manifestations of GvHD have been already presented in the first part of this article, this second part covers the prognosis, prevention and treatment of GvHD.
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PMID:[Graft-versus-host disease (GvHD) - an update. Part 2: prognosis and therapy of GvHD]. 2130 56


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