Emergence of a Costimulation-Susceptible T Cell Repertoire Post-Alemtuzumab Induction
1Department of Surgery, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, NC
2Emory Transplant Center, Emory University School of Medicine, Atlanta, GA.
Meeting: 2018 American Transplant Congress
Abstract number: 528
Keywords: Co-stimulation, Induction therapy, Rapamycin, T cells
Session Information
Session Name: Concurrent Session: Kidney Immunosuppression: General Considerations - 2
Session Type: Concurrent Session
Date: Tuesday, June 5, 2018
Session Time: 4:30pm-6:00pm
Presentation Time: 5:42pm-5:54pm
Location: Room 6A
Kidney transplant patients treated with belatacept-based regimens without depletional induction have higher rates of costimulation blockade resistant rejection (CoBRR). In contrast, belatacept effectively prevents rejection when used following T cell depletion. We longitudinally monitored T cell repertoires in 40 patients who received kidney allografts from living (n=30) or deceased (n=10) donors under alemtuzumab depletion followed by a belatacept and rapamycin maintenance regimen (ABR). Ten patients treated with non-depletional induction and a calcineurin inhibitor-based regimen were used as comparators. Using polychromatic flow cytometry, the phenotype of reconstituting T cells was assessed every 6 months for 36 months focusing specifically on markers of T cell proliferation, maturation, and costimulation. Alemtuzumab induction produced profound lymphopenia, evoking substantial homeostatic T cell proliferation characterized by increased intracellular Ki67 expression (p<0.05). Depleted patients were enriched significantly with naïve (CCR7+CD45RA+, CD57–PD1–, CD28+) CD4+ and CD8+ T cells compared to baseline (p<0.05). Alemtuzumab induction significantly reduced T cell subsets associated with belatacept resistance including CD8+CD2hiCD28–, CD4+CD28+CCR7–CD45RA–, and CD4+CD57+PD1– cells when compared with baseline (p<0.05). The CD8+CD2hiCD28+ and CD4+CD2hiCD28+ subsets were also significantly decreased (p<0.05), and a reduced effector memory compartment (CCR7–CD45RA–) in CD8+CD2hiCD28+ subset was observed post-depletion when compared with baseline (p<0.05). Control patients had no significant changes in their repertoire over the follow-up period. In summary, ABR regimen effectively prevents the repopulation of belatacept-resistant T cell subsets, and the de novo priming of reconstituted T cells results in proliferation of predominantly CD28+ naïve cells that are susceptible to belatacept. Our results demonstrate that alemtuzumab depletion followed by belatacept and rapamycin maintenance alters the immune profile of the recipient, producing a peripheral repertoire that is naïve, CD28+ and thus conceptually more conducive to control with belatacept-based therapy. This regimen warrants formal, prospective, comparative study.
CITATION INFORMATION: Gao Q., Mehta A., Guasch A., Stempora L., Kirk A., Xu H. Emergence of a Costimulation-Susceptible T Cell Repertoire Post-Alemtuzumab Induction Am J Transplant. 2017;17 (suppl 3).
To cite this abstract in AMA style:
Gao Q, Mehta A, Guasch A, Stempora L, Kirk A, Xu H. Emergence of a Costimulation-Susceptible T Cell Repertoire Post-Alemtuzumab Induction [abstract]. https://atcmeetingabstracts.com/abstract/emergence-of-a-costimulation-susceptible-t-cell-repertoire-post-alemtuzumab-induction/. Accessed November 21, 2024.« Back to 2018 American Transplant Congress