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Immunosuppressive effect of combination schedules of brequinar with leflunomide or tacrolimus on rat cardiac allotransplantation
Author(s) -
Antoniou Efstathios A.,
Deroover Arnaud,
Howie Alexander J.,
Chondros Kostas,
McMaster Paul,
D'Silva Milbhor
Publication year - 1999
Publication title -
microsurgery
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.031
H-Index - 63
eISSN - 1098-2752
pISSN - 0738-1085
DOI - 10.1002/(sici)1098-2752(1999)19:2<98::aid-micr11>3.0.co;2-c
Subject(s) - leflunomide , medicine , allotransplantation , tacrolimus , pharmacology , transplantation , methotrexate
Abstract Drug toxicity is one of the major problems in clinical immunosuppression. Combining two immunosuppressants in low or ineffective doses is an attractive strategy if it helps to reduce drug‐related toxicity. We examined the immunosuppressive efficacy of brequinar (BQR) in combination with leflunomide (Lef) or tacrolimus (FK) in a heterotopic rat cardiac allotransplantation model. Abdominal heterotopic heart grafts (DA × LEW) were immunosuppressed from the time of transplantation and continued until the ninth posttransplant day (POD) in experiments examining prophylaxis of rejection treatment (PRT). In a separate series of experiments designed to test rescue treatment (RT), immunosuppression was begun on POD 4 and continued for 10 days; transplanted rats were sacrificed the following day intentionally. Cardiac rejection was monitored by palpation and documented by light microscopy. Immunosuppressive drugs (BQR 3 mg/kg and 12 mg/kg; BQR 3 mg/kg + Lef 5 mg/kg; BQR 3 mg/kg + FK 0.5 mg/kg) were given orally by gavage; thrice weekly according to the monotherapy or dual‐therapy dosing protocol. Median survival time of the cardiac graft for controls (no treatment) was 5 days. BQR monotherapy 3 mg/kg (low dose) improved graft survival ( P = 0.003); graft histology showed moderate acute rejection. BQR monotherapy 12 mg/kg (therapeutic dose) application in the PRT or RT treatment arms of the study design resulted in aortic‐graft ruptures and clinical toxicity in each treatment arm due to overimmunosuppression; normal graft morphology was maintained. Successful rescue of rejecting grafts was histologically documented. Combining BQR with Lef or FK in the PRT protocol showed prolonged graft survival in both drug combination groups (median survival time, 14 days; P = 0.009 and 0.014, respectively). Using an identical combination protocol for RT, all grafts achieved a 14‐day graft survival; cardiac histology showed reversible moderate acute rejection. BQR given in the presence of Lef or FK not only prevented acute rejection but intercepted it so long as it was administered; grafts were rejected within 4 days of stopping immunosuppression in the PRT study. These combinations using low or subtherapeutic doses may be important for controlling transplant rejection and rescuing ongoing graft rejection. The need for continuing treatment in this strongly allogeneic model is highlighted. © 1999 Wiley‐Liss, Inc. MICROSURGERY 19:98–102 1999