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New Technique Protects Tissue Transplant From Rejection: Study

Gel filled with immunosuppressant injected at transplant site, and only activates drug when needed

By -- Robert Preidt HealthDay Reporter

News article photo.

WEDNESDAY, Aug. 13, 2014 (HealthDay News) -- A new technique for delivering anti-rejection drugs directly to the site of a tissue graft transplant is effective, lasts for months and is safer than drugs that suppress the entire immune system, a new study indicates.

After a patient receives a tissue graft transplant -- typically on the hand, arm, leg or face -- they start taking drugs to prevent their immune system from rejecting and attacking the new tissue. However, this approach can be toxic and leave patients vulnerable to infection.

The new approach delivers immunosuppressant drugs directly to the site of the tissue graft transplant, and only when they're needed. A hydrogel (jello-like) material is loaded with an immunosuppressant drug called tacrolimus, and this combination is injected under the skin after transplant surgery.

The hydrogel remains inactive until it detects an inflammation/immune response at the transplant site. It then delivers the immunosuppressant drug at the transplant site for months, according to the study published online Aug. 13 in the journal Science Translational Medicine.

"This new approach to delivering immunosuppressant therapy suggests that local delivery of the drug to the grafted tissue has benefits in reducing toxicity, as well as markedly improving therapeutic outcomes, and may lead to a paradigm shift in clinical immunosuppressive therapy in transplant surgery," study co-corresponding author and hydrogel co-developer Jeff Karp, of the division of biomedical engineering at Brigham and Women's Hospital in Boston, said in a hospital news release.

The hydrogel may prove useful in other areas of medicine, according to Karp.

"This safe, controlled-release platform approach functions for over three months from a single injection, and that has broad implications," he said. "Nearly every disease has an inflammatory component. Thus, we believe the materials we have developed could be used for localized treatment of multiple inflammatory diseases."

Karp has a financial interest in a company that is developing hydrogels for skin applications, the news release noted.

More information

The U.S. National Library of Medicine has more about transplant rejection.

SOURCES: SOURCE: Brigham and Women's Hospital, news release, Aug. 13, 2014

Last Updated: Wednesday, August 13, 2014 5:02:46 PM EDT

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