Additional inhibitory effects of intravenous immunoglobulins in combination with cyclosporine A on human T lymphocyte alloproliferative response in vitro.

1996 
Intravenous immunoglobulins (IvIgG) are often used in patients receiving a basic immunosuppressive therapy with CsA either for prevention of infectious complications or as an additional prophylaxis of graft versus host disease in clinical bone marrow transplantation. As far as we know, the combined in vitro immunosuppressive effects of these 2 drugs have not been investigated yet. In this study, we compared the effect of CsA, IvIgG, and CsA combined with IVIgG on the proliferative capacity of peripheral blood mononuclear cells in a mixed lymphocyte culture system. The concentration-dependent inhibition of peripheral blood mononuclear cell proliferation in the mixed lymphocyte culture system by CsA is a well established phenomenon. By adding IvIgG to the cultures (n=20) containing CsA, we were able to show a significantly (P<0.0002) higher inhibition compared with the inhibitory capacity of CsA alone. Cyclosporine A was added to the cultures at concentrations ranging from 25 to 400 ng/ml, and IvIgG was added in 3 different fixed concentrations: 1.25, 2.5, and 5 mg/ml. These are all concentrations which one usually obtains in patients during therapy with these drugs. Even with a minimal concentration of CsA (25 ng/ml) plus IvIgG (1.25 mg/ml), we achieved a mean inhibition of 77.7±7.9%, which is in the range of the mean inhibition (84.3±4.7%) with the highest concentration of CsA (400 ng/ml) tested. Our in vitro results could suggest that the additional therapy with IvIgG in patients receiving CsA might cause a CsA sparing effect. This might lead to a combined therapeutic regimen with a good immunosuppressive efficacy and minimal drug associated adverse effects.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    24
    References
    11
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []