Abstract
Biomarkers that reflect immune response recovery and predict clinical events during withdrawal or minimization of immunosuppressive therapy have not been evaluated. This study aimed to evaluate whether immune response recovers after withdrawal of long-term immunosuppressive treatment in stable liver transplant patients and to determine whether specific biomarkers reflect immune response reactivity and predict rejection. Pharmacokinetic–pharmacodynamic profiles were determined in 24 patients and 80 healthy donors before immunosuppressive treatment reduction began, at 50%, and at complete withdrawal. In patients who rejected, effector-T-cell response mediated by soluble IFN-γ, %CD4 +IFN-γ and %CD8 +IL-2/IFN-γ were significantly increased, while TGF-β1 production and the TGF-β1/IFN-γ ratio were significantly decreased. In patients with rejection, soluble IFN-γ and %CD8 +IL-2 were significantly higher before immunosuppressive treatment was reduced. Further studies are required, but this battery of biomarkers performed in whole blood could be a useful tool to monitor immunosuppressive treatment minimization or withdrawal protocols and identify patients at increased risk of rejection.
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