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  • Title: The prevention of accelerated cardiac allograft rejection in sensitized recipients after treatment with brequinar sodium.
    Author: Yasunaga C, Cramer DV, Chapman FA, Wang HK, Barnett M, Wu GD, Makowka L.
    Journal: Transplantation; 1993 Oct; 56(4):898-904. PubMed ID: 8212214.
    Abstract:
    Brequinar sodium (BQR) is a novel immunosuppressive agent that is highly effective in preventing B lymphocyte-mediated antibody production. We have examined the effects of BQR treatment in sensitized recipients on graft survival, donor-specific antibody responses (IgM and IgG), and the appearance of immunopathological lesions present in the grafts. LEW rat recipients were sensitized with single ACI skin graft on day 7 and received heterotopic ACI cardiac grafts on day 0. The recipients rejected the cardiac grafts in an accelerated fashion at day 2.5 post-transplantation, compared to day 7.0 in unsensitized recipients. The animals were treated with low (3 mg/kg/day) or high (12 mg/kg/3x weekly) doses of BQR during skin graft sensitization and/or after challenge with ACI heart allografts. All groups treated with BQR showed significant prolongation of graft survival in the sensitized recipients. The best survival was observed following high-dose BQR therapy during both sensitization and effector phases (median survival time = 40.0 days, P << 0.001). Daily treatment with BQR (3 mg/kg/day) prevented IgM (but not IgG) antibody responses. Treatment with higher doses of BQR (12 mg/kg/3x weekly) before and after skin graft sensitization was effective in preventing both IgM and IgG production. In general, BQR treatment resulted in effective suppression of anti-donor antibody responses, stable graft function, and a reduction in the severity of the acute vascular lesions in the graft. The effectiveness of BQR in preventing accelerated graft rejection when used at 12 mg/kg/3x weekly was comparable to that seen with treatment of sensitized animals with CsA at 15 mg/kg/day for 30 days. Daily treatment with cyclophosphamide at 5 or 15 mg/kg/day was ineffective for preventing graft rejection in sensitized recipients. These results indicated that BQR may provide an important addition to treatment protocols designed to prevent transplantation rejection in presensitized patients. BQR has the ability to significantly inhibit host cellular and humoral immune responses to the donor graft and this facet of the immunosuppressive activity of the drug may be responsible for preventing this aggressive form of rejection.
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