Association of interleukin-10 with rejection-sparing effect in septic kidney transplant recipients.

Publication/Presentation Date

4-15-1996

Abstract

Certain cytokines, particularly gamma-interferon (IFN) and interleukin (IL)-2 associated with TH1 cell function, have been shown to play a role in allograft rejection. One paradigm for long-term allograft acceptance involves TH2 cytokine predominance (IL-4 and IL-10). We describe two renal allograft recipients for whom immunosuppression was discontinued due to serious sepsis and who maintained stable renal function over 2-6 months without immunosuppression. During this time, there were higher levels of both IFN-gamma and IL-10 in the peripheral blood than in stable control kidney transplant recipients on immunosuppression. In one of the patients, levels of IL-10 fell, while those of IFN-gamma remained persistently elevated. This was associated with biopsy-proven rejection. Although peripheral blood cytokine levels may not reflect intragraft events, these data are consistent with an allograft protective role for IL-10 offsetting that of IFN-gamma in both patients off immunosuppression.

Volume

61

Issue

7

First Page

1114

Last Page

1116

ISSN

0041-1337

Disciplines

Medicine and Health Sciences

PubMedID

8623196

Department(s)

Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine

Document Type

Article

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