Immunosuppressive Induction Therapy Using the Antithymocyteglobulin Grafalon: A Single-Center Non-Interventional Study

Author:

Becker Nikolaus1,Pereyra David12ORCID,Dingfelder Jule12,Tortopis Chiara1,Saffarian Zadeh Tina1,Riha Moriz1,Kacar Sertac1,Soliman Thomas1ORCID,Berlakovich Gabriela A.1ORCID,Györi Georg1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of General Surgery, Division of Transplantation, Medical University of Vienna, 1090 Wien, Austria

2. Department of General Surgery, Division of Visceral Surgery, Medical University of Vienna, 1090 Wien, Austria

Abstract

Background: Induction therapy with depleting antibodies in the setting of liver transplantation (LT) is discussed controversially to this day. The rabbit antithymocyteglobulin (ATG) Thymoglobulin (rATG) was introduced as early as 1984 and was frequently used as a standard regime for induction therapy after LT. There are no public reports characterizing Grafalon (ATG-F), a novel ATG, as an induction agent after LT. Objectives: The aim of this observational non-interventional study was to investigate the safety and efficacy of Grafalon induction therapy and characterize its clinical effects in the setting of LT. Methods: A cohort of 80 patients undergoing deceased donor LT at the Medical University of Vienna and receiving Grafalon as part of the clinical standard immunosuppressive regimen was prospectively included between March 2021 and November 2022. Patients were monitored closely for leukocytopenia and thrombocytopenia during the first postoperative week and followed up for incidence and severity of biopsy-proven acute rejection (BPAR), overall survival, and bacterial infections in the first year after LT. Results: The incidences of thrombocytopenia and leukocytopenia following Grafalon treatment peaked on postoperative day four, with 64% and 31%, respectively. However, there were no cases of severe leukocytopenia after the first postoperative week. Induction therapy with Grafalon resulted in a rate of localized bacterial infections and bacteremia of 28% and 21%, respectively. The rate of BPAR was 12.5% in the first year after LT; the one-year survival rate in this cohort was 90%. Conclusions: Overall, this study provides evidence of the safety and efficacy of Grafalon as an induction agent. Further studies investigating the potential long-term effects of Grafalon, as well as comparison studies with different immunosuppressive regimens, are needed in order to draw further conclusions.

Funder

Neovii Biotech GmbH, Gräfelfing, Germany

Publisher

MDPI AG

Reference28 articles.

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