Abstract

Cyclosporine may suppress transplant arteriosclerosis; however, it also raises plasma cholesterol, which could promote the disease. Our aim was to test these hypotheses experimentally. In experiment 1 (n = 34), cholesterol was clamped at a human level of 5 to 7 mmol/L, and rabbits were given either saline or cyclosporine in a low, medium or high dose. In experiment 2 (n = 15), in which dietary cholesterol was fixed at 0.05 g.kg-1.d-1, and experiment 3 (n = 16), in which no dietary cholesterol was added to the chow, rabbits were given either medium-dose cyclosporine, saline, or vehicle. The duration of each experiment was 5 weeks. In experiment 1, cyclosporine attenuated the development of transplant arteriosclerosis dose dependently (trend test: P < .0001). Cyclosporine also suppressed, in a dose-dependent manner, the activation of the immune system (trend test: P < .05) and the presence of T lymphocytes (trend test: P < .0001) and macrophages in the intima (trend test: P < .01). Despite a higher plasma cholesterol level in cyclosporine-treated rabbits compared with saline-treated rabbits in both experiment 2 (4.9 versus 2.9 mmol/L) and experiment 3 (1.6 versus 0.8 mmol/L), transplant arteriosclerosis was significantly reduced by cyclosporine (Mann-Whitney U test; P < .05 and P < .05). These results suggest that cyclosporine suppresses experimental transplant arteriosclerosis dose dependently. Accordingly, in the assessment of the optimal cyclosporine dose to heart-transplanted patients, it should be taken into account that a dose reduction may promote transplant arteriosclerosis.

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