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Dive into the research topics where Johann Pratschke is active.

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Featured researches published by Johann Pratschke.


Transplantation | 2009

Anti-human leukocyte antigen and donor-specific antibodies detected by luminex posttransplant serve as biomarkers for chronic rejection of renal allografts.

Nils Lachmann; Paul I. Terasaki; Klemens Budde; Lutz Liefeldt; Andreas Kahl; Petra Reinke; Johann Pratschke; Birgit Rudolph; Danilo Schmidt; Abdulgabar Salama; Constanze Schönemann

Background. Although the incidence of early acute rejection could have been diminished in the past, the long-term renal allograft survival could not benefit from the introduction of more effective immunosuppressive regimens mainly aiming at cellular rejection mechanisms. The cause of chronic rejection is still discussed controversially. Here, we demonstrate to what extent human leukocyte antigen (HLA) antibodies (HLAab) posttransplant contribute to late graft outcome. Methods. A total of 1014 deceased kidney transplant recipients transplanted at the Charité hospital were monitored in a cross-sectional manner for the development of HLAab using Luminex Single Antigen beads. Patients with stable kidney function at a median of 5-years posttransplant were tested once for HLAab and monitored for 5.5 years after testing. Results. Thirty percent of recipients showed HLAab. Donor-specific antibodies (DSA) were found in 31% of antibody positive patients. The presence of DSA was associated with a significantly lower graft survival of 49% vs. 83% in the HLAab negative group (P≤0.0001). Non-DSAs also had an adverse effect on graft survival (70% vs. 83%; P=0.0001). In a prospective analysis of 195 patients with repeatedly no detectable HLAab, the survival probability was 94% as opposed to 79% survival among patients who developed HLAab de novo after the first testing (P=0.05). Conclusions. We confirmed that HLAab produced even late after transplantation are detrimental to graft outcome. DSA were proven to have a strong adverse impact on graft survival. The results indicate that a posttransplant HLAab monitoring routine could be appropriate to improve long-term results.


Cancer Research | 2009

Quantitative DNA Methylation Analysis of FOXP3 as a New Method for Counting Regulatory T Cells in Peripheral Blood and Solid Tissue

Georg Wieczorek; Anne Marie Asemissen; Fabian Model; Ivana Turbachova; Stefan Floess; Volker Liebenberg; Udo Baron; Diana Stauch; Katja Kotsch; Johann Pratschke; Alf Hamann; Christoph Loddenkemper; Harald Stein; H.-D. Volk; Ulrich Hoffmüller; Alexander Mustea; Jochen Huehn; Carmen Scheibenbogen; Sven Olek

Regulatory T-cells (Treg) have been the focus of immunologic research due to their role in establishing tolerance for harmless antigens versus allowing immune responses against foes. Increased Treg frequencies measured by mRNA expression or protein synthesis of the Treg marker FOXP3 were found in various cancers, indicating that dysregulation of Treg levels contributes to tumor establishment. Furthermore, they constitute a key target of immunomodulatory therapies in cancer as well as transplantation settings. One core obstacle for understanding the role of Treg, thus far, is the inability of FOXP3 mRNA or protein detection methods to differentiate between Treg and activated T cells. These difficulties are aggravated by the technical demands of sample logistics and processing. Based on Treg-specific DNA demethylation within the FOXP3 locus, we present a novel method for monitoring Treg in human peripheral blood and solid tissues. We found that Treg numbers are significantly increased in the peripheral blood of patients with interleukin 2-treated melanoma and in formalin-fixed tissue from patients with lung and colon carcinomas. Conversely, we show that immunosuppressive therapy including therapeutic antibodies leads to a significant reduction of Treg from the peripheral blood of transplantation patients. In addition, Treg numbers are predictively elevated in the peripheral blood of patients with various solid tumors. Although our data generally correspond to data obtained with gene expression and protein-based methods, the results are less fluctuating and more specific to Treg. The assay presented here measures Treg robustly in blood and solid tissues regardless of conservation levels, promising fast screening of Treg in various clinical settings.


Circulation | 2000

Activation of the Heart by Donor Brain Death Accelerates Acute Rejection After Transplantation

Markus J. Wilhelm; Johann Pratschke; Francisca Beato; Maarten W. Taal; Mamoru Kusaka; Wayne W. Hancock; Nicholas L. Tilney

BackgroundDonor brain death upregulates expression of inflammatory mediators in the heart. It is hypothesized that these nonspecific changes trigger and amplify acute rejection in unmodified recipients compared with hearts from normal living donors. We examined the inflammatory and immunological consequences of gradual-onset donor brain death on cardiac allografts after transplantation. Methods and ResultsFunctioning hearts were engrafted from normotensive donors after 6 hours of ventilatory support. Hearts from brain-dead rats (Fisher, F344) were rejected significantly earlier (mean±SD, 9.3±0.6 days) by their (Lewis) recipients than hearts from living donor controls (11.6±0.7 days, P =0.03). The inflammatory response of such organs was accelerated, with rapid expression of cytokines, chemokines, and adhesion molecules and brisk infiltration of associated leukocyte populations. Upregulation of major histocompatibility class II antigens increased organ immunogenicity. Acute rejection evolved in hearts from brain-dead donors more intensely and at a significantly faster rate than in controls. ConclusionsDonor brain death is deleterious to transplanted hearts. The resultant upregulation of inflammatory factors provokes host immune mechanisms and accelerates the acute rejection process in unmodified hosts.


Transplantation | 2000

Activation of inflammatory mediators in rat renal isografts by donor brain death

Mamoru Kusaka; Johann Pratschke; Markus J. Wilhelm; Farzard Ziai; Kambiz Zandi-Nejad; Harald S. Mackenzie; Wayne W. Hancock; Nicholas L. Tilney

BACKGROUND Brain death (BD) has been thought to influence the early course of transplanted organs by triggering a series of nonspecific inflammatory events that in turn may increase the kinetics and intensity of the immunological host responses. In this study early nonspecific, cellular, and molecular changes occurring in kidney isografts from BD donors are compared with those from normal anesthetized, ventilated controls. METHODS After induction of brain death, the animals were mechanically ventilated for 6 hr before organ removal. Only rats with stable blood pressure (mean arterial pressure >80 mmHg) were included. Serum creatinines were measured daily. Representative grafts were harvested 6 hr after brain death and between 1 hr and 5 days after engraftment for morphology, immunohistology, and reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction. The presence of serum cytokines was assessed by enzyme linked immunoabsorbant assay. RESULTS Serum creatinine levels rose slightly in recipients from BD donors. Serum interleukin-1beta levels increased within 6 hr versus controls (P<0.05). mRNA levels of interleukin-1beta and macrophage inhibitory protein-1 in the kidneys were up-regulated transiently before engraftment (6 hr after BD) and 1 hr after revascularization (P<0.05). By immunohistology, numbers of infiltrating polymorphonuclear leukocytes peaked at 24 hr in parallel with intragraft induction of P- and E-selectin, complement, and other proinflammatory chemokines and cytokines. At 5 days, the isografts from BD donors were highly infiltrated by host leukocyte populations associated with intense up-regulation of their products. In contrast, those from control donors remained relatively normal through this initial follow-up period. CONCLUSIONS The intense nonimmune inflammation produced in isografts after donor BD may represent the initial stages of a continuum between an initial nonspecific and later immune reactivity, when placed in the context of allotransplantation.


American Journal of Transplantation | 2007

Brain Death Activates Donor Organs and Is Associated with a Worse I/R Injury After Liver Transplantation

Sascha Weiss; Katja Kotsch; M. Francuski; Anja Reutzel-Selke; Mantouvalou L; Roman Klemz; O. Kuecuek; Sven Jonas; Wesslau C; Frank Ulrich; Andreas Pascher; H.-D. Volk; Stefan G. Tullius; Peter Neuhaus; Johann Pratschke

The majority of transplants are derived from donors who suffered from brain injury. There is evidence that brain death causes inflammatory changes in the donor. To define the impact of brain death, we evaluated the gene expression of cytokines in human brain dead and ideal living donors and compared these data to organ function following transplantation.


Annals of Surgery | 2000

Accelerated rejection of renal allografts from brain-dead donors.

Johann Pratschke; Markus J. Wilhelm; Mamoru Kusaka; Francisca Beato; Edgar L. Milford; Wayne W. Hancock; Nicholas L. Tilney

ObjectiveTo define the potential influences of donor brain death on organs used for transplantation. Summary Background DataDonor brain death causes prompt upregulation of inflammatory mediators on peripheral organs. It is hypothesized that this antigen-independent insult may influence the rate and intensity of host alloresponsiveness after engraftment. MethodsThe rates of survival of unmodified Lew recipients sustained by kidney allografts from brain-dead, normal anesthetized, and anesthetized ventilated F344 donors were compared. Brain death was induced by gradually increasing intracranial pressure under electroencephalographic control. Tracheotomized brain-dead animals and anesthetized controls were mechanically ventilated for 6 hours before transplant nephrectomy. The rate and intensity of the acute rejection event were examined by histology, immunohistology, and reverse transcriptase–polymerase chain reaction. ResultsAnimals bearing kidneys from brain-dead donors died of renal failure secondary to acute rejection at a significantly faster rate than those from anesthetized living controls or anesthetized animals ventilated for 6 hours. Within 3 hours after placement and reperfusion of brain-dead donor grafts, significant neutrophil infiltration was observed, followed by increasing numbers of macrophages and T cells. mRNA of proinflammatory mediators detected in kidneys within 6 hours of brain death and upregulated even before transplantation increased thereafter and appeared to accelerate and amplify host alloresponsiveness, as manifested by the rapid expression of chemokines, cytokines, adhesion molecules, and major histocompatibility complex class II antigens in the engrafted organ. The process evolved in the controls less intensely and at a slower rate. ConclusionsDonor brain death is a significant risk factor for peripheral organs used for transplantation. The activated state of such organs appears to trigger host immune mechanisms that accelerate the process of acute rejection. The effects of this central injury may explain in part the less satisfactory performance of cadaver organs in human transplantation compared with those from living sources.


Annals of Surgery | 2008

Methylprednisolone therapy in deceased donors reduces inflammation in the donor liver and improves outcome after liver transplantation: a prospective randomized controlled trial.

Katja Kotsch; Frank Ulrich; Anja Reutzel-Selke; Andreas Pascher; Wladimir Faber; P Warnick; S Hoffman; M. Francuski; C Kunert; O. Kuecuek; Guido Schumacher; Claus Wesslau; Andreas Lun; Sven Kohler; Sascha Weiss; Stefan G. Tullius; P. Neuhaus; Johann Pratschke

Objective:To investigate potential beneficial effects of donor treatment with methylprednisolone on organ function and outcome after liver transplantation. Summary Background Data:It is proven experimentally and clinically that the brain death of the donor leads to increased levels of inflammatory cytokines and is followed by an intensified ischemia/reperfusion injury after organ transplantation. In experiments, donor treatment with steroids successfully diminished these effects and led to better organ function after transplantation. Methods:To investigate whether methylprednisolone treatment of the deceased donor is applicable to attenuate brain death-associated damage in clinical liver transplantation we conducted a prospective randomized treatment-versus-control study in 100 deceased donors. Donor treatment (n = 50) consisted of 250 mg methylprednisolone at the time of consent for organ donation and a subsequent infusion of 100 mg/h until recovery of organs. A liver biopsy was taken immediately after laparotomy and blood samples were obtained after brain death diagnosis and before organ recovery. Cytokines were assessed by real-time reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction. Soluble serum cytokines were measured by cytometric bead array system. Results:After methylprednisolone treatment, steroid plasma levels were significantly higher (P < 0.05), and a significant decrease in soluble interleukins, monocyte chemotactic protein-1, interleukin-2, interleukin-6, tumor necrosis factor-&agr;, and inducible protein-10 was observed. Methylprednisolone treatment resulted in a significant downregulation of intercellular adhesion molecule-1, tumor necrosis factor-&agr;, major histocompatibility complex class II, Fas-ligand, inducible protein-10, and CD68 intragraft mRNA expression. Significantly ameliorated ischemia/reperfusion injury in the posttransplant course was accompanied by a decreased incidence of acute rejection. Conclusions:Our present study verifies the protective effect of methylprednisolone treatment in deceased donor liver transplantation, suggesting it as a potential therapeutical approach.


Transplant International | 2011

Multicentric evaluation of model for end‐stage liver disease‐based allocation and survival after liver transplantation in Germany – limitations of the ‘sickest first’‐concept

Tobias J. Weismüller; Panagiotis Fikatas; Jan Schmidt; Ana Paula Barreiros; Gerd Otto; Susanne Beckebaum; Andreas Paul; Markus N. Scherer; Hartmut Schmidt; Hans J. Schlitt; Peter Neuhaus; Jürgen Klempnauer; Johann Pratschke; Michael P. Manns; Christian P. Strassburg

Since the introduction of model for end‐stage liver disease (MELD) in 2006, post‐orthotopic liver transplantation (OLT) survival in Germany has declined. The aim of this study was to evaluate risk factors and prognostic scores for outcome. All adult OLT recipients in seven German transplant centers after MELD implementation (December 2006–December 2007) were included. Recipient data were analyzed for their influence on 1‐year outcome. A total of 462 patients (mean calculated MELD = 20.5, follow‐up: 1 year) were transplanted for alcoholic cirrhosis (33.1%), hepatocellular carcinoma (26.6%), Hepatitis‐C (17.1%), Hepatitis‐B (9.5%), primary sclerosing cholangitis (5.6%) and late graft‐failure after first OLT before December 2006 (8.7%). 1‐year patient survival was 75.8% (graft survival 71.2%) correlating with MELD parameters and serum choline esterase. MELD score >30 [odds ratio (OR) = 4.17, confidence interval: 2.57–6.78, 12‐month survival = 52.6%, c‐statistic = 0.669], hyponatremia (OR = 2.07), and pre‐OLT hemodialysis (OR = 2.35) were the main death risk factors. In alcoholic cirrhosis (n = 153, mean MELD = 21.1) and hepatocellular carcinoma (n = 123, mean MELD = 13.5), serum bilirubin and the survival after liver transplantation score were independent outcome parameters, respectively. MELD >30 currently represents a major risk factor for outcome. Risk factors differ in individual patient subgroups. In the current German practice of organ allocation to sicker patients, outcome prediction should be considered to prevent results below acceptable standards.


Transplant International | 2010

Incidence of and risk factors for ischemic-type biliary lesions following orthotopic liver transplantation.

Christoph Heidenhain; Johann Pratschke; Gero Puhl; Ulf P. Neumann; Andreas Pascher; Winfried Veltzke-Schlieker; Peter Neuhaus

Ischemic‐type biliary lesions (ITBL) account for a major part of patients’ morbidity and mortality after orthotopic liver transplantation (OLT). The exact origin of this type of biliary complication remains unknown. This study retrospectively evaluated 1843 patients. Patients with primary sclerosing cholangitis were excluded from this study. The diagnosis of ITBL was established only when all other causes of destruction of the biliary tree were ruled out. Donor age (P = 0.028) and cold ischemic time (CIT) (P = 0.002) were found to be significant risk factors for the development of ITBL. Organs that were perfused with University of Wisconsin (UW) solution developed ITBL significantly more often than Histidine–Tryptophan–Ketoglutarate (HTK)‐perfused organs (P = 0.036). The same applied to organs harvested externally and shipped to our center versus those that were procured locally by our harvest teams (P < 0.001). Pressure perfusion via the hepatic artery significantly reduced the risk of ITBL (P = 0.001). The only recipient factor that showed a significant influence was Child‐Pugh score status C (P = 0.021). Immunologic factors had no significant impact on ITBL. The clinical consequences of this study for our institution have been the strict limitation of CIT to <10 h and the exclusive use of HTK solution. We further advocate that all organ procurement teams perform pressure perfusion on harvested organs.


Transplantation | 2005

Age and immune response in organ transplantation.

Paulo N. Martins; Johann Pratschke; Andreas Pascher; Lutz Fritsche; Ulrich Frei; Peter Neuhaus; Stefan G. Tullius

The immune system undergoes a complex and continuous remodeling as the result of aging. These changes have a major impact on allorecognition and alloresponse. In addition, immunosuppression in the elderly is challenging as a consequence of an increased incidence of associated comorbidities and altered pharmacokinetics. Both advanced donor and recipient age should be considered independent risk factors for poor patient and graft survival rates, albeit acting in a synergistic manner. Consequently, modifications of the immune system because of aging may request an age-adapted allocation and immunosuppression in parallel with close patient monitoring. Interventions to selectively target changes associated with the senescence process seem to be promising therapeutic strategies to improve transplantation outcome. Here, we are going to review the immunologic changes associated with the aging process relevant for transplantation and their impact on immunosuppressive protocols, organ allocation policies, and transplantation outcome.

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Stefan Schneeberger

Innsbruck Medical University

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Stefan G. Tullius

Brigham and Women's Hospital

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Gerald Brandacher

Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine

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