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Pilot Study of Delayed ICOS/ICOS-L Blockade With ?CD40 to Modulate Pathogenic Alloimmunity in a Primate Cardiac Allograft Model.


ABSTRACT: Background:Inducible costimulator (ICOS) is rapidly upregulated with T-cell stimulation and may represent an escape pathway for T-cell costimulation in the setting of CD40/CD154 costimulation blockade. Induction treatment exhibited no efficacy in a primate renal allograft model, but rodent transplant models suggest that the addition of delayed ICOS/ICOS-L blockade may prolong allograft survival and prevent chronic rejection. Here, we ask whether ICOS-Ig treatment, timed to anticipate ICOS upregulation, prolongs NHP cardiac allograft survival or attenuates pathogenic alloimmunity. Methods:Cynomolgus monkey heterotopic cardiac allograft recipients were treated with ?CD40 (2C10R4, d0-90) either alone or with the addition of delayed ICOS-Ig (d63-110). Results:Median allograft survival was similar between ICOS-Ig + ?CD40 (120 days, 120-125 days) and ?CD40 (124 days, 89-178 days) treated animals, and delayed ICOS-Ig treatment did not prevent allograft rejection in animals with complete CD40 receptor coverage. Although CD4+ TEM cells were decreased in peripheral blood (115 ± 24) and mLNs (49 ± 1.9%) during ICOS-Ig treatment compared with monotherapy (214 ± 27%, P = 0.01; 72 ± 9.9%, P = 0.01, respectively), acute and chronic rejection scores and kinetics of alloAb elaboration were similar between groups. Conclusions:Delayed ICOS-Ig treatment with the reagent tested is probably ineffective in modulating pathogenic primate alloimmunity in this model.

SUBMITTER: O'Neill NA 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC5811273 | biostudies-literature | 2018 Feb

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Pilot Study of Delayed ICOS/ICOS-L Blockade With αCD40 to Modulate Pathogenic Alloimmunity in a Primate Cardiac Allograft Model.

O'Neill Natalie A NA   Zhang Tianshu T   Braileanu Gheorghe G   Cheng Xiangfei X   Hershfeld Alena A   Sun Wenji W   Reimann Keith A KA   Dahi Sia S   Kubicki Natalia N   Hassanein Wessam W   Laird Christopher C   Cimeno Arielle A   Azimzadeh Agnes M AM   Pierson Richard N RN  

Transplantation direct 20180202 2


<h4>Background</h4>Inducible costimulator (ICOS) is rapidly upregulated with T-cell stimulation and may represent an escape pathway for T-cell costimulation in the setting of CD40/CD154 costimulation blockade. Induction treatment exhibited no efficacy in a primate renal allograft model, but rodent transplant models suggest that the addition of delayed ICOS/ICOS-L blockade may prolong allograft survival and prevent chronic rejection. Here, we ask whether ICOS-Ig treatment, timed to anticipate ICO  ...[more]

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