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Regulatory T cells for minimising immune suppression in kidney transplantation: phase I/IIa clinical trial
OBJECTIVE: To assess whether reshaping of the immune balance by infusion of autologous natural regulatory T cells (nTregs) in patients after kidney transplantation is safe, feasible, and enables the tapering of lifelong high dose immunosuppression, with its limited efficacy, adverse effects, and hig...
Autores principales: | , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , |
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Formato: | Online Artículo Texto |
Lenguaje: | English |
Publicado: |
BMJ Publishing Group Ltd.
2020
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Materias: | |
Acceso en línea: | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7576328/ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33087345 http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmj.m3734 |
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author | Roemhild, Andy Otto, Natalie Maureen Moll, Guido Abou-El-Enein, Mohamed Kaiser, Daniel Bold, Gantuja Schachtner, Thomas Choi, Mira Oellinger, Robert Landwehr-Kenzel, Sybille Juerchott, Karsten Sawitzki, Birgit Giesler, Cordula Sefrin, Anett Beier, Carola Wagner, Dimitrios Laurin Schlickeiser, Stephan Streitz, Mathias Schmueck-Henneresse, Michael Amini, Leila Stervbo, Ulrik Babel, Nina Volk, Hans-Dieter Reinke, Petra |
author_facet | Roemhild, Andy Otto, Natalie Maureen Moll, Guido Abou-El-Enein, Mohamed Kaiser, Daniel Bold, Gantuja Schachtner, Thomas Choi, Mira Oellinger, Robert Landwehr-Kenzel, Sybille Juerchott, Karsten Sawitzki, Birgit Giesler, Cordula Sefrin, Anett Beier, Carola Wagner, Dimitrios Laurin Schlickeiser, Stephan Streitz, Mathias Schmueck-Henneresse, Michael Amini, Leila Stervbo, Ulrik Babel, Nina Volk, Hans-Dieter Reinke, Petra |
author_sort | Roemhild, Andy |
collection | PubMed |
description | OBJECTIVE: To assess whether reshaping of the immune balance by infusion of autologous natural regulatory T cells (nTregs) in patients after kidney transplantation is safe, feasible, and enables the tapering of lifelong high dose immunosuppression, with its limited efficacy, adverse effects, and high direct and indirect costs, along with addressing several key challenges of nTreg treatment, such as easy and robust manufacturing, danger of over immunosuppression, interaction with standard care drugs, and functional stability in an inflammatory environment in a useful proof-of-concept disease model. DESIGN: Investigator initiated, monocentre, nTreg dose escalation, phase I/IIa clinical trial (ONEnTreg13). SETTING: Charité-University Hospital, Berlin, Germany, within the ONE study consortium (funded by the European Union). PARTICIPANTS: Recipients of living donor kidney transplant (ONEnTreg13, n=11) and corresponding reference group trial (ONErgt11-CHA, n=9). INTERVENTIONS: CD4+ CD25+ FoxP3+ nTreg products were given seven days after kidney transplantation as one intravenous dose of 0.5, 1.0, or 2.5-3.0×10(6) cells/kg body weight, with subsequent stepwise tapering of triple immunosuppression to low dose tacrolimus monotherapy until week 48. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: The primary clinical and safety endpoints were assessed by a composite endpoint at week 60 with further three year follow-up. The assessment included incidence of biopsy confirmed acute rejection, assessment of nTreg infusion related adverse effects, and signs of over immunosuppression. Secondary endpoints addressed allograft functions. Accompanying research included a comprehensive exploratory biomarker portfolio. RESULTS: For all patients, nTreg products with sufficient yield, purity, and functionality could be generated from 40-50 mL of peripheral blood taken two weeks before kidney transplantation. None of the three nTreg dose escalation groups had dose limiting toxicity. The nTreg and reference groups had 100% three year allograft survival and similar clinical and safety profiles. Stable monotherapy immunosuppression was achieved in eight of 11 (73%) patients receiving nTregs, while the reference group remained on standard dual or triple drug immunosuppression (P=0.002). Mechanistically, the activation of conventional T cells was reduced and nTregs shifted in vivo from a polyclonal to an oligoclonal T cell receptor repertoire. CONCLUSIONS: The application of autologous nTregs was safe and feasible even in patients who had a kidney transplant and were immunosuppressed. These results warrant further evaluation of Treg efficacy and serve as the basis for the development of next generation nTreg approaches in transplantation and any immunopathologies. TRIAL REGISTRATION: NCT02371434 (ONEnTreg13) and EudraCT:2011-004301-24 (ONErgt11). |
format | Online Article Text |
id | pubmed-7576328 |
institution | National Center for Biotechnology Information |
language | English |
publishDate | 2020 |
publisher | BMJ Publishing Group Ltd. |
record_format | MEDLINE/PubMed |
spelling | pubmed-75763282020-10-21 Regulatory T cells for minimising immune suppression in kidney transplantation: phase I/IIa clinical trial Roemhild, Andy Otto, Natalie Maureen Moll, Guido Abou-El-Enein, Mohamed Kaiser, Daniel Bold, Gantuja Schachtner, Thomas Choi, Mira Oellinger, Robert Landwehr-Kenzel, Sybille Juerchott, Karsten Sawitzki, Birgit Giesler, Cordula Sefrin, Anett Beier, Carola Wagner, Dimitrios Laurin Schlickeiser, Stephan Streitz, Mathias Schmueck-Henneresse, Michael Amini, Leila Stervbo, Ulrik Babel, Nina Volk, Hans-Dieter Reinke, Petra BMJ Research OBJECTIVE: To assess whether reshaping of the immune balance by infusion of autologous natural regulatory T cells (nTregs) in patients after kidney transplantation is safe, feasible, and enables the tapering of lifelong high dose immunosuppression, with its limited efficacy, adverse effects, and high direct and indirect costs, along with addressing several key challenges of nTreg treatment, such as easy and robust manufacturing, danger of over immunosuppression, interaction with standard care drugs, and functional stability in an inflammatory environment in a useful proof-of-concept disease model. DESIGN: Investigator initiated, monocentre, nTreg dose escalation, phase I/IIa clinical trial (ONEnTreg13). SETTING: Charité-University Hospital, Berlin, Germany, within the ONE study consortium (funded by the European Union). PARTICIPANTS: Recipients of living donor kidney transplant (ONEnTreg13, n=11) and corresponding reference group trial (ONErgt11-CHA, n=9). INTERVENTIONS: CD4+ CD25+ FoxP3+ nTreg products were given seven days after kidney transplantation as one intravenous dose of 0.5, 1.0, or 2.5-3.0×10(6) cells/kg body weight, with subsequent stepwise tapering of triple immunosuppression to low dose tacrolimus monotherapy until week 48. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: The primary clinical and safety endpoints were assessed by a composite endpoint at week 60 with further three year follow-up. The assessment included incidence of biopsy confirmed acute rejection, assessment of nTreg infusion related adverse effects, and signs of over immunosuppression. Secondary endpoints addressed allograft functions. Accompanying research included a comprehensive exploratory biomarker portfolio. RESULTS: For all patients, nTreg products with sufficient yield, purity, and functionality could be generated from 40-50 mL of peripheral blood taken two weeks before kidney transplantation. None of the three nTreg dose escalation groups had dose limiting toxicity. The nTreg and reference groups had 100% three year allograft survival and similar clinical and safety profiles. Stable monotherapy immunosuppression was achieved in eight of 11 (73%) patients receiving nTregs, while the reference group remained on standard dual or triple drug immunosuppression (P=0.002). Mechanistically, the activation of conventional T cells was reduced and nTregs shifted in vivo from a polyclonal to an oligoclonal T cell receptor repertoire. CONCLUSIONS: The application of autologous nTregs was safe and feasible even in patients who had a kidney transplant and were immunosuppressed. These results warrant further evaluation of Treg efficacy and serve as the basis for the development of next generation nTreg approaches in transplantation and any immunopathologies. TRIAL REGISTRATION: NCT02371434 (ONEnTreg13) and EudraCT:2011-004301-24 (ONErgt11). BMJ Publishing Group Ltd. 2020-10-21 /pmc/articles/PMC7576328/ /pubmed/33087345 http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmj.m3734 Text en © Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2019. Re-use permitted under CC BY-NC. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/This is an Open Access article distributed in accordance with the Creative Commons Attribution Non Commercial (CC BY-NC 4.0) license, which permits others to distribute, remix, adapt, build upon this work non-commercially, and license their derivative works on different terms, provided the original work is properly cited and the use is non-commercial. See: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/. |
spellingShingle | Research Roemhild, Andy Otto, Natalie Maureen Moll, Guido Abou-El-Enein, Mohamed Kaiser, Daniel Bold, Gantuja Schachtner, Thomas Choi, Mira Oellinger, Robert Landwehr-Kenzel, Sybille Juerchott, Karsten Sawitzki, Birgit Giesler, Cordula Sefrin, Anett Beier, Carola Wagner, Dimitrios Laurin Schlickeiser, Stephan Streitz, Mathias Schmueck-Henneresse, Michael Amini, Leila Stervbo, Ulrik Babel, Nina Volk, Hans-Dieter Reinke, Petra Regulatory T cells for minimising immune suppression in kidney transplantation: phase I/IIa clinical trial |
title | Regulatory T cells for minimising immune suppression in kidney transplantation: phase I/IIa clinical trial |
title_full | Regulatory T cells for minimising immune suppression in kidney transplantation: phase I/IIa clinical trial |
title_fullStr | Regulatory T cells for minimising immune suppression in kidney transplantation: phase I/IIa clinical trial |
title_full_unstemmed | Regulatory T cells for minimising immune suppression in kidney transplantation: phase I/IIa clinical trial |
title_short | Regulatory T cells for minimising immune suppression in kidney transplantation: phase I/IIa clinical trial |
title_sort | regulatory t cells for minimising immune suppression in kidney transplantation: phase i/iia clinical trial |
topic | Research |
url | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7576328/ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33087345 http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmj.m3734 |
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