Copyright
©The Author(s) 2015.
World J Hepatol. Jun 18, 2015; 7(11): 1494-1508
Published online Jun 18, 2015. doi: 10.4254/wjh.v7.i11.1494
Published online Jun 18, 2015. doi: 10.4254/wjh.v7.i11.1494
Table 1 Clinical data of prognostic relevant immune modulation by hepatitis B hyperimmunoglobulin after liver transplantation
Ref. | No. of patients receiving HBIg | Efficacy of HBIg on immunology/survival |
Farges et al[80] | n = 116 | Significant reduction (P < 0.05) of acute and chronic rejection rate (1.7%) compared to other indications like PBC (6.1%), PSC (13%), AIC (17%), and HCV (9.2%), without increased risk of bacterial infection; significantly lower risk (P < 0.05) of death or retransplantation from rejection or either sepsis or de novo malignancy (3.5%) compared to patients with alcoholic cirrhosis (19%) |
Couto et al[81] | n = 12 | Significantly less acute rejection episodes (0.3 ± 0.5) as compared to HBsAg-positive (0.9 ± 0.7; P = 0.02) and HBsAg-naïve (0.7 ± 0.7; P = 0.03) liver transplant patients without HBIg therapy |
Kwekkeboom et al[82] | n = 40 | Sigificantly lower rate of acute rejection (12%) as compared to patients without viral hepatitis (34%; P = 0.012); only HBIg treatment (HR = 0.39, 95%CI: 0.16-0.99, P = 0.047) and year of LT (HR = 0.87, 95%CI: 0.78-0.98, P = 0.017) were identified as independent predictors of acute rejection |
Wang et al[83] | n = 1000 | Reduction of HBV recurrence rate and of viral mutants; significantly improved 1-yr (P = 0.03) and 3-yr survival (P = 0.005) as compared to an antiviral prophylaxis without HBIg |
Table 2 Clinical data of prognostic relevant immune modulation by hepatitis B hyperimmunoglobulin in recipients of hepatitis B virus-positive liver allografts
Ref. | HBV characteristics donor/recipient | Antiviral prophylaxis | Impact of HBIg on outcome |
Brock et al[94] | HBc+/HBsAg- (n = 958) | HBIg alone: n = 61 | 70% reduction in risk of mortality by HBIg prophylaxis; |
HBIg + Lam: n = 66 | (HR = 0.29, 95%CI: 0.10-0.86, P = 0.026) | ||
Lam alone: n = 116 | |||
None: n = 509 | |||
Missing data: n = 206 | |||
Li et al[112] | HBsAg+/ HBsAg- (n = 63) | With HBIg: n = 17 | HBIg independently associated with superior |
HBsAg+/HBsAg+ (n = 15) | Without HBIg: n = 61 | posttransplant graft survival; | |
With Lam: n = 14 | (HR = 0.23, 95%CI: 0.06-0.81) and patient survival | ||
Without Lam: n = 64 | (HR = 0.16, 95%CI: 0.04-0.759) |
Table 3 Clinical data of prognostic relevant immune modulation by cytomegalovirus immune globulin after liver transplantation
Ref. | No. of patients receiving CMVIg | Efficacy of CMVIg on immunology/survival |
Farges et al[80] | n = 19 | Significant reduction of acute rejection rate (19%) compared to recipients without CMVIg (48%; P = 0.01); no impact of on incidence of chronic rejection and bacterial infections |
Falagas et al[121] | n = 90 | Improved 1-yr survival (86% vs 72%; P = 0.029) and a clear trend towards improved long-term survival (68% vs 54%; P = 0.055). CMVIg as independent predictor of beneficial outcome at one year post-LT (P = 0.042) |
Bucuvalas et al[124] | n = 336 | Lower rate of acute rejection at 3-mo (31% vs 40%; P = 0.02); (CMV)Ig treatment as independent predictor for absence of acute rejection (HR = 0.73; P = 0.0019); significantly increased death-free allograft survival (HR = 0.57; P = 0.014) by (CMV)Ig |
Fisher et al[125] | n = 2805 | Significantly lower risk of graft loss and recipients' death (with or without additional antiviral agents; P < 0.001) at 7 yr post-LT; significantly higher 7-yr-survival rate after CMVIg monoprophylaxis (72%) vs no prophylaxis (67%; P = 0.02) |
Table 4 Clinical data of immune modulation by intravenous immunoglobulins in liver transplant recipients with positive lymphocytotoxic crossmatch
Ref. | Transplant procedure | No. of patients receiving IVIg (pre-LT/post-LT) | Additional immune modulation | Efficacy of IVIg on outcome |
Watson et al[150] | LT | n = 1; post-LT, after detection of AMR | Plasmapheresis, rituximab | Intermittent decrease of Bili, liver enzymes and DSAs'; no survival |
Dar et al[151] | SLKT | n = 6; pre- and post-LT desensitization | - | Survival rate 83.3% |
Kozlowski et al[142] | LT | n = 3; post-LT, after detection of AMR | Plasmapheresis, rituximab | Transient decrease of Bili, yGT and DSAs' in 2 patients; survival rate 33.3% |
Koch et al[153] | SLKT | n = 1; post-LT, after liver function deterioration and detection of DSAs' | Splenectomy, plasmapheresis, bortezomid | Improvement of liver/kidney function; decrease of DSAs'; survived |
Shindoh et al[154] | LDLT | n = 1; post-LT, after decrease of platelet count and increase of attacking IgG | - | Recovery of platelet count; decrease of attacking IgG; survived |
Leonard et al[137] | LT | n = 2; post-LT, after liver function deterioration | - | Recovery of allograft function; survival rate 100% |
Hong et al[155] | LDLT | n = 1; post-LT, desensitization | - | Survived |
Table 5 Clinical data of immune modulation by intravenous immunoglobulins in ABO-incompatible liver transplant recipients
Ref. | Transplant | No. of patients receiving | Additional immune modulation | Efficacy of IVIg on immunology/survival |
procedure | IVIg (pre-LT/post-LT) | |||
Morioka et al[167] | LDLT | n = 2; post-LDLT; treatment of AMR | Plasmapheresis | Normalization of liver function; survived |
Urbani et al[170] | LT | n = 1; post-LT; treatment of AMR | Plasmapheresis | Normalization of liver function; survived |
Ikegami et al[168] | LDLT | n = 1; post-LDLT; treatment of AMR | Rituximab, plasma exchange, splenectomy | Normalization of liver function; survived |
Testa et al[169] | LDLT | n = 5; pre-LDLT | Plasmapheresis, splenectomy | Patient and graft survival 80% at mean of 43 mo post-LDLT |
Urbani et al[172] | LT | n = 8; pre- and post-LT | Plasma exchange | Patient and graft survival 87.5% at 18 mo; no case of acute or chronic rejection, no ITBL |
Ikegami et al[161] | LDLT | n = 4; post-LDLT | Rituximab, plasma exchange, splenectomy | Survival rate 100% (28, 8, 6, 5 mo post-LDLT) |
Takeda et al[173] | LDLT | n = 3; post-LDLT; treatment of AMR | Plasma exchange | Normalization liver function; survived |
Mendes et al[174] | LT | n = 10; pre- and post-LT | Rituximab, plasmapheresis | Survival rate 50%; death mainly related to MOF and sepsis |
Kim et al[175] | LDLT | n = 14; post-LDLT | Rituximab, plasma exchange | Survival 100%; no case of acute or chronic rejection |
Lee et al[176] | LDLT | n = 15; post-LT | Rituximab, plasma exchange | Survival 100%; no case of bacterial or fungal infection; 3 cases of biliary strictures |
Shen et al[177] | LT | n = 35; pre- and post-LT | Rituximab | Survival rate 83.1% at 3-yr; one case of acute celluar rejection; two cases of AMR |
- Citation: Kornberg A. Intravenous immunoglobulins in liver transplant patients: Perspectives of clinical immune modulation. World J Hepatol 2015; 7(11): 1494-1508
- URL: https://www.wjgnet.com/1948-5182/full/v7/i11/1494.htm
- DOI: https://dx.doi.org/10.4254/wjh.v7.i11.1494