R. Dall'Amico et al., Extracorporeal photochemotherapy after cardiac transplantation: a new therapeutic approach to allograft rejection, INT J ARTIF, 23(1), 2000, pp. 49-54
Photopheresis (ECP) is a new immunomodulatory therapy in which recipient ly
mphocytes are treated extracorporeally with 8-methoxypsoralen and ultraviol
et light. The treatment seems to induce an inhibition of both humoral and c
ellular rejection after transplantation.
Objective: Since recurrent rejection (RR) continues to be a severe complica
tion after heart transplantation (HTx) and the immunosuppressive regimes us
ed for the treatment are often associated with increased morbidity and mort
ality we investigated whether ECP could have a beneficial effect on the num
ber and severity of rejection episodes.
Methods: Eleven HTX recipients (5 M and 6 F; mean age 48.5 yrs) with RR wer
e enrolled in the study. ECP was performed at weekly intervals during the 1
st month, at 2 week intervals during the 2nd and 3rd month, and then monthl
y for another 3 months.
Results. The fraction of biopsies (EMB) with a grade 0/1A rejection increas
ed during ECP from 46% to 72% while the EMB showing a 3A/3B rejection decre
ased from 42% to 18%. It is also noteworthy that out of the 78 EMB performe
d during ECP only one showed a 3B rejection in comparison with 13 out of 11
0 EMB in the pre-ECP period.
Six rejection relapses were observed in a total follow-up of 60 months, two
of them occurring during the tapering of oral steroid. Four relapses were
reversed by ECF, one by IV steroids and the last by methotrexate after the
failure of both IV steroids and ECF. The mean doses of immunosuppressive dr
ugs resulted lower after 6 months of ECP: steroids were reduced from 13 to
8.25 mg/day, cyclosporine from 375 to 285 mg/day, azathioprine from 55 to 3
5 mg/day.
Conclusions. ECP is a well tolerated treatment. Its administration allows b
etter RR control and significant reduction in immunosuppressive therapy.