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PRINCIPALES OF ORGAN TRANSPLANTATION

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PRINCIPALES OF ORGAN TRANSPLANTATION Prof D.Nazem Shams Professor Of Surgical Oncology OCMU The field of organ transplantation has made remarkable progress in a short ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: PRINCIPALES OF ORGAN TRANSPLANTATION


1
PRINCIPALES OF ORGAN TRANSPLANTATION
  • Prof D.Nazem Shams
  • Professor Of Surgical Oncology
  • OCMU

2
  • The field of organ transplantation has made
    remarkable progress in a short period of time.
    Transplantation has evolved to become the
    treatment of choice for end-stage organ failure
    resulting from almost any of a wide variety of
    causes. Transplantation of the kidney, liver,
    pancreas, intestine, heart, and lungs has now
    become commonplace in all parts of the world.

3
Definition
  • Transplantation is the act of transferring an
    organ, tissue, or cell from one place to
    another. .

4
Types
  • Broadly speaking, transplants are divided into
    three categories based on the similarity between
    the donor and the recipient
  • 1-Autotransplants
  • 2-Allotransplants
  • 3-Xenotransplants
  • .

5
  • 1-Autotransplants involve the transfer of tissue
    or organs from one part of an individual to
    another part of the same individual. They are the
    most common type of transplants and include skin
    grafts and vein grafts for bypasses.
  • NO immunosuppression is required

6
  • 2-Allotransplants involve transfer from one
    individual to a different individual of the same
    speciesthe most common scenario for most solid
    organ transplants performed today.
  • Immunosuppression is required for allograft
    recipients to prevent rejection.

7
  • 3- Xenotransplants involve transfer across
    species barriers. Currently, xenotransplants are
    largely relegated to the laboratory, given the
    complex, potent immunologic barriers to success.

8
TRANSPLANT IMMUNOBIOLOGY
  • The success of transplants today is due in large
    part to control of the rejection process, thanks
    to an ever-deepening understanding of the immune
    process triggered by a transplant.

9
Transplant Antigens
  • The main antigens involved in triggering
    rejection are coded for by a group of genes known
    as the major histocompatibility complex (MHC). In
    humans, the MHC complex is known as the human
    leukocyte antigen (HLA) system. It comprises a
    series of genes located on chromosome 6.

10
  • HLA molecules can initiate rejection and graft
    damage, via humoral or cellular mechanisms
  • Humoral rejection mediated by recepient's AB.
    (e.g. blood transfusion, previous transplant, or
    pregnancy)
  • Cellular rejection is the more common type of
    rejection after organ transplants. Mediated by T
    lymphocytes, it results from their activation and
    proliferation after exposure to donor MHC
    molecules.

11
Complications Of Organ Transplantation
  • 1- Rejection
  • 2-Malignancy

12
1-Clinical Rejection
  • Graft rejection is a complex process involving
    several components, including T lymphocytes
  • , B lymphocytes, macrophages, and cytokines, with
    resultant local inflammatory injury and graft
    damage.
  • Rejection can be classified into the following
    types based on timing and pathogenesis
    hyperacute, acute, and chronic.

13
A-Hyperacute rejection
  • This type of rejection, which usually occurs
    within min after the transplanted organ is
    reperfused, is because of the presence of
    preformed antibodies in the recipient, antibodies
    that are specific to the donor. These bind to the
    vascular endothelium in the graft and activate
    the complement cascade, leading to platelet
    activation and to diffuse intravascular
    coagulation. The result is a swollen, darkened
    graft, which undergoes ischemic necrosis.

14
B-Acute rejection
  • This used to be the most common type of
    rejection, but with modern immunosuppression it
    is becoming less and less common. Acute rejection
    is usually seen within days to a few months
    posttransplant. It is predominantly a
    cell-mediated process, with lymphocytes being the
    main cells involved. With current
    immunosuppressive drugs, most acute rejection
    episodes are generally asymptomatic. They usually
    manifest with abnormal laboratory values (e.g.,
    elevated creatinine in kidney transplant
    recipients, and elevated transaminase levels in
    liver transplant recipients).

15
C-Chronic rejection
  • This form of rejection occurs months to years
    posttransplant. Now that shortterm graft survival
    rates have improved so markedly, chronic
    rejection is an increasingly common problem.
    Histologically, the process is characterized by
    atrophy, fibrosis, and arteriosclerosis. Both
    immune and nonimmune mechanisms are likely
    involved. Clinically, graft function slowly
    deteriorates over months to years

16
CLINICAL IMMUNOSUPPRESSION
  • The success of modern transplantation is in large
    part because of the successful development of
    effective immunosuppressive agents.
  • Two types of immunosuppression are used in
    transplantation Induction and Maintenance
    immunosuppresion.

17
1-Induction immunosuppression
  • refers to the drugs administered immediately
    posttransplant to induce immunosuppression.

18
2-Maintenance immunosuppression
  • refers to the drugs administered to maintain
    immunosuppression once recipients have recovered
    from the operative procedure. Individual drugs
    can be categorized as either biologic or
    nonbiologic agents. Biologic agents (monoclonal
    and polyclonal antibodies) consist of antibody
    preparations directed at various cells or
    receptors involved in the rejection process they
    are generally used in induction (rather than
    maintenance) protocols.
  • Nonbiologic agents (e.g. corticosteroids,azathiopr
    ine and cyclosporines)form the mainstay of
    maintenance protocols.

19
2-Malignancy
  • Transplant recipients are at increased risk for
    developing certain types of de novo malignancies,
    including nonmelanomatous skin cancers (37-fold
    increased risk), lymphoproliferative disease
    (23-fold increased risk), gynecologic and
    urologic cancers, and Kaposi sarcoma. The risk
    ranges from 1 percent among renal allograft
    recipients to approximately 56 percent among
    recipients of small bowel and multivisceral
    transplants.

20
  • The most common malignancies in transplant
    recipients are skin cancers. They tend to be
    located on sun-exposed areas and are usually
    squamous or basal cell carcinomas. Often they are
    multiple and have an increased predilection to
    metastasize. Diagnosis and treatment are the same
    as for the general population.
  • Patients are encouraged to use sunscreen
    liberally and avoid significant sun exposure.

21
Sources of organs for transpalntation
  • The current Main Sources of organs for
    transpalntation are
  • 1-Deceased (cadaver) donor (however the recipient
    has to wait till this cadaver becomes available)
  • 2-Living donor transplantation (has medical,
    ethical, financial, and psychosocial problems).

22
  • The biggest problem facing transplant centers
    today is the shortage of organ donors. Mechanisms
    that might increase the number of available
    organs include
  • (1) optimizing the current donor pool (e.g., the
    use of multiple organ donors or marginal donors)
  • (2) increasing the number of living-donor
    transplants (e.g., the use of living unrelated
    donors)
  • (3) using unconventional and controversial donor
    sources (e.g., using deceased donors without
    cardiac activity or anencephalic donors)
  • (4) performing xenotransplants.

23
New directions for organTransplantation
  • STEM CELLS
  • ,
  • CELL THERAPY
  • AND
  • TISSUE ENGINEEERING

24
  • Cell therapy can be defined as The use of living
    cells to restore, maintain or enhance the
    function of tissues and organs.
  • The use of isolated, viable cells has emerged as
    an experimental therapeutic tool in the past
    decade, due to progress in cell biology and
    particularly in techniques for the isolation and
    culture of cells derived from several organs and
    tissues

25
  • Cell-based therapy is one of the more recent
    approaches in regenerative medicine that aims at
    replacing or repairing organs and tissues.
    Different cell types have been used, such as
    skeletal myocytes, which have been injected into
    infarcted cardiac scar tissue, or neuronal cells
    inoculated into the brains of patients with
    nervous disorders. Alternative approaches include
    extracorporeal organ replacement for kidney and
    liver failure, the potential transplantation of
    xenogenic organs and cells and stem cell therapy.

26
Forms (types) of cell therapy
  • 1-Extracorporeal bioartificial organs used as
    assistance devices.
  • 2-Injections, implantations or transplantation of
    cells.

27
1-Bioartificial Organs (Assistance Devices)
  • Extracorporeal support systems most frequently
    use a hollow fiber cartridge containing
    immobilized cells with mass exchange requiring
    either direct contact with perfused blood or
    through a semi permeable membrane separating
    cells from blood.

28
  • Howevr, although the bioartificial organs are an
    attractive technology with therapeutic potential,
    the limited availability of normal human cells
    has prevented the technology from being utilized
    in clinical settings

29
2-Injections, implantations or transplantation of
cells
  • Strategies (Methods) of Transplantation
  • 1-Transplantation into blood stream
  • The reported problems with this method are
    emboli, cells carried to inappropriate sites,
    difficulties for engraftment, and cells not in
    ideal environment.
  • 2-Transplantation by grafting (Tissue
    engineering)
  • It is ideal for cells from solid organs with
    less complication than blood infusion. It
    requires implanting aggregated cells or, ideally,
    cells on scaffolding e.g., polylactide meshes.

30
  • Cell sourcing remains among the most critical
    difficulties in the development of cell
    therapies, whether for bioartificial organs or
    for cell transplantation.

31
  • This proplem could be alleviated by use of stem
    cells (this is called stem cell therapy),
    especially probably in combination with grafting
    methods, because the progenitor cells can be
    cryopreserved, have dramatic expansion potential,
    and have low or negligible immunogenic antigens
    that can possibly be managed with minimal need
    for immunosuppressive drugs.

32
Why stem cell?
  • The following stem cell characterisics make them
    good candidate for cell based therapies
  • 1-potential to be harvested from patients.
  • 2-High capacity of proliferation in culture.
  • 3-Ease of manipulation to replace existing non
    functioning genes via gene transfer methods.
  • 4-Ability to migrate to hosts target tissues.
  • 5-Ability to integrate into host tissues.

33
Stem cells have 4 main properties
  • 1-Unspecialized.
  • 2- Self renewal.
  • 3-Potency Stem cells are either
  • Totipotent (e.g. fertilized ova).
  • Pleuripotent(e.g. ES cells, EC cells and EG
    cells , the last two are less desirable for
    research).
  • Multipotent (e.g. tissue stem cells).
  • Unipotent (e.g. hepatocytes, skin and corneal
    stem cells).
  • 4-Robust repopulation (functional, long term
    tissue reconstitution).
  • And moreover the flexibility in expressing these
    characteristics and serial transplantability
    should be feasible
  • .Cells that fulfill all these criteria are called
    "actual stem cells." The cells that possess these
    capabilities but do not express them are named
    "potential stem cells." (Potten and Loeffler,
    1990 and Dabeva et al., 2003).

34
  • Scientists primarily work with two kinds of stem
    cells from animals (mouse) and humans which are
    embryonic stem cells and adult stem cells.

Scientists took about 20 years to learn how to
grow human embryonic stem cells in the laboratory
following the development of conditions for
growing mouse stem cells.
35
Stem cell therapy
  • means treatment in which stem cells are induced
    to differentiate into the specific cell type
    required to repair damaged tissues.
  • Right now, only few diseases are treatable with
    stem cell therapies because scientists can only
    regenerate few types of tissues.

However, the success of the most established stem
cell-based therapies (blood and skin transplants)
gives hope that someday stem cells will allow
scientists to develop therapies for a variety of
diseases previously thought to be incurable.
36
Stem cell therapy
  • Only non-ESCs have been used clinically so far.
    Bone marrow cells were first used successfully 4
    decades ago, and cord blood stem cells in the
    past 1015 years. These cells have been of
    benefit for blood disorders such as leukemia,
    multiple myeloma and lymphoma and disorders with
    defective genes such as severe combined immune
    deficiency.

37
  • As yet, ESC has not been used clinically.
  • There are no current approved treatments or human
    trials using embryonic stem cells.
  • ES cells, being totipotent cells, require
    specific signals for correct differentiation - if
    injected directly into the body ES cells will
    differentiate into many different types of cells,
    causing a teratoma.
  • There are in fact only few and modest published
    successes using animal models of disease.

38
Various potential therapeutic applications of
human embryonic stem cells (hES) (Habibullah,
2007).
39
  • Much of the work with stem cells is preclinical,
    relying on results obtained from mice or rats. In
    the following cases (neurological disorders and
    cardiovascular disease) phase I clinical trials
    are still several years into the future (Panno,
    2005).

40
Obstacles to stem cell therapy
  • There are many ways in which human stem cells
    can be used in basic research and in clinical
    research. However, there are many technical
    hurdles and obstacles between the promise of stem
    cells and the realization of these uses, which
    will only be overcome by continued intensive stem
    cell research.

41
Obstacles to stem cell therapy
These hurdles are
  • A- For ESCs There are three major problems
  • 1-Ethical proplem (ethical issues) There are
    many ethical dilemmas in stem cell and cloning
    research, and in their use in therapy, concerning
  • - the isolation of cells,
  • - consent and donation,
  • - the destruction of potential life forms for the
    treatment of others.

It must be demonstrated that to alleviate human
suffering does not necessarily justify the use of
any means to achieve it.
42
Obstacles to stem cell therapy
These hurdles are
  • A- For ESCs There are three major problems
  • 2- Immunological rejection problems (rejection).
  • 3- Biological proplems e.g. teratomas ,
    chromosomal abnormalities and possible
    contamination of the stem cells with retoviruses
    and other animal pathogens

It must be demonstrated that to alleviate human
suffering does not necessarily justify the use of
any means to achieve it.
43
Obstacles to stem cell therapy
These hurdles are
  • B- For NonESCs There have been many technical
    challenges that have been overcome in adult stem
    cell research.
  • Some of the barriers include
  • the rare occurrence of adult stem cells among
    other differentiated cells,
  • difficulties in isolating and identifying the
    cells
  • difficulties in growing adult stem cells in
    tissue culture

44
Obstacles to stem cell therapy
However
  • Tissue stem cells have been shown by the
    published evidence to be a more promising
    alternative for patient treatments, with a vast
    biomedical potential.
  • Tissue stem cells have proven success in the
    laboratory dish, in animal models of disease, and
    in current clinical treatments.
  • Tissue stem cells also avoid problems with tumor
    formation, transplant rejection, and provide
    realistic excitement for patient treatments.

45
  • The relative lack of success of embryonic stem
    cells should be compared with the real success of
    tissue(adult) stem cells. A wealth of scientific
    papers published over the last few years document
    that tissue stem cells are a much more promising
    source of stem cells for regenerative medicine.
    Adult (tissue)stem cells actually do show
    pluripotent capacity in generation of tissues,
    meaning that they can generate most, if not all,
    tissues of the body.

46
Tissue engineering
  • Tissue engineering is the process of creating
    living, physiological 3D tissues and organs. The
    process starts with a source of cells derived
    from a patient or from a donor. The cells may be
    immature cells, in the stem cell stage, or cells
    that are already capable of carrying out tissue
    functions often, a mixture of different cell
    types (e.g., liver cells and blood vessel cells)
    and cell maturity levels is needed. Many
    therapeutic applications of tissue engineering
    involve disease processes that might be prevented
    or treated if better drugs were available or if
    the processes could be better understood .

47
  • Tissue engineering-based therapies may provide a
    possible solution to alleviate the current
    shortage of organ donors. In tissue engineering,
    biological and engineering principles are
    combined to produce cell-based substitutes with
    or without the use of materials. One of the major
    obstacles in engineering tissue constructs for
    clinical use is the limit in available human
    cells. Stem cells isolated from adults or
    developing embryos are a current source for cells
    for tissue engineering.

48
  • In general, there are three main approaches to
    tissue engineering
  • (1) To use isolated cells or cell substitutes as
    cellular replacement parts
  • (2) To use acellular materials capable of
    inducing tissue regeneration and
  • (3) To use a combination of cells and materials
    (typically in the form of scaffolds and this
    approach be categorized into two categories
  • Open and closed systems. These systems are
    distinguished based on the exposure of the cells
    to the immune system upon implantation

49
  • The materials used for tissue engineering are
    either synthetic biodegradable materials (such as
    polylactic acid (PLA), polyglycolic acid (PGA),
    poly lactic-glycolic acid (PLGA), polypropylene
    fumarate, poly ethylene glycol (PEG) and
    polyarylates) or natural materials such as
    collagen, hydroxyapatite, calcium carbonate, and
    alginate. Natural materials are typically more
    favorable to cell adherence, whereas the
    properties of synthetic materials such as
    degradation rate, mechanical properties,
    structure, and porosity can be better controlled

50
  • Open tissue engineering systems
  • have been successfully used to create a number of
    biological substitutes such as bone, cartilage,
    blood vessels, cardiac, smooth muscle,
    pancreatic, liver, tooth, retina, and skin
    tissues. Several tissue-engineered products are
    under clinical trials for FDA approval.
    Engineered skin or wound dressing and cartilage
    are two of the most advanced areas with regards
    to clinical potential. For example, a skin
    substitute that consists of living human dermis
    cells in a natural scaffold consisting of type I
    collagen already received FDA approval to be used
    for a diabetic foot ulcer. In addition, various
    cartilage and bone are also currently in clinical
    stages, and bladder and urologic tissue are being
    tested in various stages of research (Levenberg
    et al., 2006).

51
  • Closed tissue engineering systems have been used
    particularly for the treatment of diabetes, liver
    failure, and Parkinsons disease. This system may
    prove to be especially useful in conjunction with
    ES cells since the immobilization of ES cells
    within closed systems may overcome the
    immunological barrier that faces ES cell-based
    therapies (Strauer and Kornowski, 2003).

52
  • Current approaches for tissue engineering using
    tissue (postnatal) stem cells
  • (A) Expansion of a population ex vivo prior to
    transplantation into the host,
  • (B) Ex vivo recreation of a tissue or organ for
    transplantation, and
  • (C) Design of substances and/or devices for in
    vivo activation of stem cells, either local or
    distant, to induce appropriate tissue repair

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