Transplantation Flashcards
Acute GvHD
<100d post Tx.
Skin - bulluos blistering, burns-like
Liver - liver failure
Gut - inflamm, blood diarrhoea, cramps
Chronic GvHD
> 100d post Tx
skin, mucous membranes, gut, liver, kidneys, eyes, joints
Risk factors for GvHD (7)
age sex of D/R (M-->F) disease stage viral status (cmv reactivation) HLA disparities stem cell source (peripheral blood) conditioning regime - the more immunosuppressants used the less likely GvHD is, but more likely relapse is
Prevention of GvHD
HLA matching
Methotrexate and cyclosporin –> T cell depletion (but increase relapse rate)
Rx of GvHD
steroids cyclosporin mycophenate mofetil monoclonal abs photopheresis total lymphoid ablation
Most important antigens in transplantation
HLA class 2 = DR - most important. present to CD4 class 1 = A B C 2nd most important = ABO 3rd = minor HLA
rejection reaction where donor APC presents donor HLA to recipient T cell => cellular mediated toxicity (type IV hypersens)
Direct cellular mediated rejection - Acute (weeks to months)
Symptoms of acute cellular Tx rejection
- fever
- worsening function of the allograft
- tenderness over allograft
pathology of acute cellular rejection on biopsy
increased monocytic infiltrates, graft infiltration by CD4, CD8, macrophages.
Cause of hyperacute rejection reaction
mins to hours after tx
due to preformed abs - antiABO, anti-HLA
can be prevented with adequate matching and screening pre-Tx
rejection reaction where recipient APC presents donor HLA to recipient T cell => type Iv hypersensitivity
Indirect cellular mediated rejection
usually chronic
3 signals needed for t cell activation
TCR:APC
costim
cytokines
pathology seen in ab-mediated acute rejection on biopsy
infiltrates of PMN
complement (C4) deposition
mainly in capillaries and blood vessels, vasculitis
activation signals in acute ab-mediated rejection
phagocyte activation via Fc receptor
complement activation via ab-ag complexes
antibodies for ab-mediated rejection
ABO-abs - naturally occuring dependent on blood type
HLA-abs - non-natural, acquired via - prev tx, pregnancy, blood tx
Tests for preformed abs in the blood
complement-mediated cytotoxicity test
flow cytometry
solid phase assay
complement-mediated cytotoxicity
does the recipient serum kill donor lymphocytes in the presence of complement?
flow cytometry
does recipient serum bind donor lymphocytes –> fluoresce
solid phase assay
does recipient serum bind donor-specific HLA (types and subtypes) –> fluoresce
Induction agents used in transplantation (target signals 1,2 and 3)
- OKT3/ATG - blocks lymphocyte activation and migration
- anti-CD25 - binds a-chain of IL-2 receptor - inhibits t cell proliferation
- anti-CD52 - binds cd52 found on lymphocytes and causes depletion
baseline agents used in transplantation
calcineurin inhibitors - tacrolimus or cyclosporin
azathioprine/mycophenate mofetil
+/- steroids
treatment of acute T cell mediated rejection
ATG/OKT3 (muromumab)
steroids
treatment of acute ab mediated rejection
IVIG, plasma exchange, anti-CD20, anti-C5
Common post Tx malignancies
Viral associated (x 100) Kaposi’s sarcoma (HHV8) Lymphoproliferative disease (EBV) Skin Cancer (x20) Risk of other cancers eg lung, colon also increased (x 2-3)
common infections post Tx
Cytomegalovirus
BK virus - haemorrhagic cystitis
Pneumocytis carinii
Aspergillosis - increased mortality associated