Continuing Medical Education

Immune tolerance and immunosuppression in solid organ transplantation

C W N Spearman, Z A Barday

Abstract


Organ transplantation is the treatment of choice for patients with end-stage organ failure. Most of them will require lifelong immunosuppression to prevent both acute and chronic rejection. T-cell recognition of the allograft major histocompatibility complex antigens is the central event initiating cellular rejection of the allograft, and subsequent full T-cell activation requires three signals.
Immunosuppressive regimens currently used in clinical practice are nonspecific and target T-cell activation, clonal expansion or differentiation into effector T cells. While these therapeutic regimens have advanced considerably and one-year graft survival figures for most solid organ transplants (SOTs) are >90%, the long-term graft survival remains fair owing to graft loss from chronic rejection. The ‘holy grail’ of SOT is therefore the development of a permanent specific immune tolerance against donor allogeneic antigens without the long-term use of immunosuppression.


Authors' affiliations

C W N Spearman, Division of Hepatology, Department of Medicine, Faculty of Health Sciences, University of Cape Town, South Africa

Z A Barday, Division of Nephrology, Department of Medicine, Faculty of Health Sciences, University of Cape Town, South Africa

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Keywords

Immune tolerance; Immunosuppression; Solid organ transplantation

Cite this article

South African Medical Journal 2014;104(11):795. DOI:10.7196/SAMJ.8960

Article History

Date submitted: 2014-09-29
Date published: 2014-10-06

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