Clinical Significance of the Cellular Pharmacodynamics of Tacrolimus in Living-Donor Liver Transplantation

Author:

Mijiti Abuduxukuer12,Matsuno Naoto1,Takeuchi Hironori3,Unezaki Sakae3,Nagao Takeshi1,Hirano Toshihiko4

Affiliation:

1. Department of 5th Surgery, Hachioji Medical Center, Tokyo Medical University, Tokyo 193-0944, Japan

2. Department of Surgery, Kashgar First People's Hospital, Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region, China

3. Department of Practical Pharmacy, Tokyo University of Pharmacy and Life Sciences, Tokyo 192-0392, Japan

4. Department of Clinical Pharmacology, Tokyo University of Pharmacy and Life Sciences, Tokyo 192-0392, Japan

Abstract

Successful immunosuppressive therapy is critical for liver transplantation; however, a considerable number of patients experience fatal rejection or alternatively exhibit serious infection resulting from excessive immunosuppression. The in vitro tacrolimus response of peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) before transplantation was compared to the clinical outcome up to 4 weeks after operation in 28 living-donor liver transplant recipients treated with tacrolimus. The tacrolimus IC50 values against concanavalin A-induced PBMC blastogenesis in vitro were calculated. These recipients were classified into two groups with the mean tacrolimus IC50 (0.18 ng/ml) as the cutoff point, after which the clinical outcome between the patient groups was compared. The allograft rejection incidence in the low-sensitivity group (IC50 < 0.18 ng/ml; n = 16) was 6/12 (50.0%), which was significantly higher than the incidence of 2/16 (12.5%) in the high-sensitivity group (IC50 > 0.18 ng/ml; n = 12) ( p = 0.0297). In contrast, the infection incidence in the high-sensitivity group was 6/16 (37.5%), which was significantly higher than that of the low-sensitivity group (1/12; 8.3%) ( p = 0.0401). These data suggest that patients exhibiting a low PBMC sensitivity to tacrolimus have a risk of rejection, whereas highly sensitive patients have a risk of infection in living-donor liver transplantations under tacrolimus therapy.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Transplantation,Cell Biology,Biomedical Engineering

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