Abstract

Small bowel transplantations (SBT) are being increasingly performed to treat patients with irreversible intestinal failure or short-bowel syndrome. Histologic evaluation of small bowel allograft biopsies is important for the diagnosis of acute cellular rejection (ACR). Serotonin (5-hydroxytriptamin) is a biogenous amine of which up to 95% is present in the enterochromaffin cells of the gastrointestinal tract. The aim of our study was to analyze rejection and number of serotonin positive cells in the intestinal graft biopsy samples early after SBT in pigs. 24 pigs were used and divided into 4 groups. Group A, autologous SBT (n = 3) as a control group; group B, allogeneic SBT with tacrolimus monotherapy (n = 7); group C, allogeneic SBT immunosuppressed with tacrolimus and sirolimus (n = 8); and group D, without immunosuppression (n = 6). Observation period was 30 days. Mucosal biopsies were obtained on days 0, 3, 5, 7, 10, 14, 20, 28 after transplantation. ACR was classified according to standardized grading schema on a scale of indeterminate, mild, moderate, and severe. Serotonin positive cells were quantified as the number of positive cells in 20 high power fields. There were no significant differences in the number of serotonin positive cells and different grades of ACR. In our experiment the number of serotonin positive cells was not a sensitive marker of ACR in the early period after small bowel transplantation.

Highlights

  • Intestinal transplantation is becoming increasingly utilized as therapy for irreversible intestinal failure associated with failure or severe complications of total parenteral nutrition

  • We evaluated the number of serotonin positive cells in connection with grade of acute cellular rejection (ACR) (Graph 4.)

  • Acute cellular rejection is the major cause of intestinal graft failure after transplantation

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Summary

Introduction

Intestinal transplantation is becoming increasingly utilized as therapy for irreversible intestinal failure associated with failure or severe complications of total parenteral nutrition. Acute cellular rejection (ACR) remains a frequent complication and represents the major cause of intestinal graft failure after SBT. Evaluation of small bowel biopsy samples represents the optimal method to identify ACR. If not treated promptly, can rapidly increase in severity, is regularly followed by sepsis, and can result in graft loss or death, early detection and treatment are essential. Small bowel transplantations (SBT) are being increasingly performed to treat patients with irreversible intestinal failure or short-bowel syndrome. Histologic evaluation of small bowel allograft biopsies is important for the diagnosis of acute cellular rejection (ACR). The aim of our study was to analyze rejection and number of serotonin positive cells in the intestinal graft biopsy samples early after SBT in pigs

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