Acute Versus Chronic Administration of Calcineurin-Inhibitors Differentially Affect T-Cell Function

  • Julia Kirchhof
  • Benjamin Wilde
  • Justine Schmidt
  • Nils Mülling
  • Liubov Petrakova
  • Alexandra Brinkhoff
  • Manfred Schedlowski
  • Oliver Witzke

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Calcineurin-inhibitors (CNI) are used in renal transplant patients (RTX) to prevent rejection. CNI mainly suppress T-cell mediated immunity but very little is known about the impact of long-term treatment with CNI on T-cell function.

OBJECTIVE: We investigated the immunological effects of long-term CNI intake in RTX patients in comparison to short-term CNI administration in healthy controls (HC).

METHODS: Blood was drawn from 30 RTX patients with long-term CNI treatment. In addition, blood was sampled from HC with short-term CNI treatment (four dosages) before the first and 2 hours after the last CsA intake. T-cells were analyzed for cytokine production, proliferation, and CD25 expression.

RESULTS: Short-term CNI reduced T-cell derived IL-2 and IFNγ as well as T-cell proliferation in HC. IFNγ was not suppressed in patients with long-term CNI treatment. IL-2 production, CD25 expression, and T-cell proliferation were enhanced in long-term CNI patients.

CONCLUSION: Suppression of IFNγ/IL-2 and T-cell proliferation is weaker during long-term CNI treatment in patients compared to short-term treatment in healthy subjects. Enhanced CD25 expression may lower the threshold for T-cell activation during long-term CNI treatment.

Bibliographical data

Original languageEnglish
ISSN1871-5303
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2021
Externally publishedYes

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PubMed 32867664