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Date publication

septembre 2017

Journal

Transplant immunology

Auteurs

Membres identifiés du Cancéropôle Est :
Pr DUCLOUX Didier , Mme LAHEURTE Caroline


Tous les auteurs :
Bamoulid J, Crepin T, Gaiffe E, Laheurte C, Moulin B, Frimat L, Rieu P, Mousson C, Durrbach A, Heng AE, Rebibou JM, Saas P, Courivaud C, Ducloux D

Résumé

Broad T cell depletion by polyclonal anti-thymocyte globulins (ATG) has been used for many years as a part of immunosuppressive treatment in transplantation. Currently, two different ATG are used in clinical practice, Thymoglobulin and Grafalon. Due to differences in the immunization source, these products contain different specificities and quantity of antibodies. These differences may have clinical consequences. We conducted a nested study in a large prospective multicentric cohort of kidney transplant to determine whether Grafalon-treated and Thymoglobulin-treated patients experience different lymphocyte reconstitution and clinical outcomes. 182 patients matched for age, gender, CMV status, CMV prophylaxis, number of previous transplantation, and maintenance immunosuppressive treatment were included (Thymoglobulin, [n=91]; Grafalon®, [n=91]). One-year post-transplant, recent thymic emigrants were significantly decreased (12±10% vs 21±12%; p<0.001) in Grafalon-treated patients. By contrast, T cell activation (CD38+DR+Ki67+) and senescence (CD8+CD57+CD28-) was increased in Thymoglobulin-treated patients. Compared to Grafalon, Thymoglobulin was not associated with a significantly different rate of acute rejection. CMV disease (p=0.013) was more frequent in Thymoglobulin-treated patients. Grafalon and Thymoglobulin seem to be equivalent to prevent acute rejection. CMV disease is more frequent in Thymoglobulin-treated patients. One year post-transplant immune profile profoundly differs according to the type of ATG.

Mots clés

Acute rejection, Lymphocyte reconstitution, Polyclonal anti-thymocyte globulins, Transplantation

Référence

Transpl. Immunol.. 2017 Sep;: