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Dive into the research topics where Maria T. Millan is active.

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Featured researches published by Maria T. Millan.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 2008

Tolerance and Chimerism after Renal and Hematopoietic-Cell Transplantation

John D. Scandling; Stephan Busque; Sussan Dejbakhsh-Jones; Claudia Benike; Maria T. Millan; Judith A. Shizuru; Richard T. Hoppe; Robert Lowsky; Edgar G. Engleman; Samuel Strober

We describe a recipient of combined kidney and hematopoietic-cell transplants from an HLA-matched donor. A post-transplantation conditioning regimen of total lymphoid irradiation and antithymocyte globulin allowed engraftment of the donors hematopoietic cells. The patient had persistent mixed chimerism, and the function of the kidney allograft has been normal for more than 28 months since discontinuation of all immunosuppressive drugs. Adverse events requiring hospitalization were limited to a 2-day episode of fever with neutropenia. The patient has had neither rejection episodes nor clinical manifestations of graft-versus-host disease.


Transplantation | 2001

Promising early outcomes with a novel, complete steroid avoidance immunosuppression protocol in pediatric renal transplantation.

Minnie M. Sarwal; Peter D. Yorgin; Steve Alexander; Maria T. Millan; Amir Belson; Natasha Belanger; Laura Granucci; C. Y. D. Major; Cathy Costaglio; Jaime Sanchez; Pamela Orlandi; Oscar Salvatierra

Background. Corticosteroids have been a cornerstone of immunosuppression for four decades despite their adverse side effects. Past attempts at steroid withdrawal in pediatric renal transplantation have had little success. This study tests the hypothesis that a complete steroid-free immunosuppressive protocol avoids steroid dependency for suppression of the immune response with its accompanying risk of acute rejection on steroid withdrawal. Methods. An open labeled prospective study of complete steroid avoidance immunosuppressive protocol was undertaken in 10 unsensitized pediatric recipients (ages 5–21 years; mean 14.4 years) of first renal allografts. Steroids were substituted with extended daclizumab use, in combination with tacrolimus and mycophenolate mofetil. Protocol biopsies were performed in the steroid-free group at 0, 1, 3, 6, and 12 months posttransplantation. Clinical outcomes were compared to a steroid-based group of 37 matched historical controls. Results. Graft and patient survival was 100% in both groups. Clinical acute rejection was absent in the steroid-free group at a mean follow-up time of 9 months (range 3–13.7 months). Protocol biopsies in the steroid-free group (includes 10 patients at 3 months, 7 at 6 months, and 4 at 12 months) revealed only two instances of mild (Banff 1A) subclinical rejection (reversed by only a nominal increase in immunosuppression) and no chronic rejection. At 6 months the steroid-free group had no hypertension requiring treatment (P =0.003), no hypercholesterolemia (P =0.007), and essentially no body disfigurement (P =0.0001). Serum creatinines, Schwartz GFR, and mean delta height Z scores trended better in the steroid-free group. In the steroid-free group, one patient had cytomegalovirus disease at 1 month and three had easily treated herpes simplex stomatitis, but with no significant increase in bacterial infections or rehospitalizations over the steroid-based group. The steroid-free group was more anemic early posttransplantation (P =0.004), suggesting an early role of steroids in erythrogenesis; erythropoietin use normalized hematocrits by 6 months. Conclusions. Complete steroid-free immunosuppression is efficacious and safe in this selected group of children with no early clinical acute rejection episodes. This protocol avoids the morbid side effects of steroids without increasing infection, and may play a future critical role in avoiding noncompliance, although optimizing renal function and growth.


Transplantation | 2003

Continued superior outcomes with modification and lengthened follow-up of a steroid-avoidance pilot with extended daclizumab induction in pediatric renal transplantation1

Minnie M. Sarwal; Jayakumar R. Vidhun; Steven R. Alexander; Thomas Satterwhite; Maria T. Millan; Oscar Salvatierra

Background. Corticosteroids have been invariant transplant immunosuppressives with numerous adverse effects. We previously reported 6-month results in 10 patients using extended daclizumab induction to safely eliminate steroid use in pediatric renal transplantation. This expanded pilot series discusses immunosuppression dosing modification to further minimize drug toxicity without sacrificing regimen efficacy. Methods. Fifty-seven pediatric renal transplant recipients were enrolled in the pilot steroid-free protocol. Extended daclizumab induction, tacrolimus, and mycophenolate mofetil (MMF) were intended maintenance drugs. Fourteen patients were equal to or younger than 5 years, and 43 patients were older than 5 years of age at transplantation. There were seven protocol breaks. Study patients underwent serial protocol transplant biopsies (n=246), and serum daclizumab and mycophenolic acid (MPA) trough levels were evaluated. In this efficacy study, controls were 50 historical-matched steroid-based children receiving tacrolimus with 100% 2-year graft survival and without delayed graft function. Results. Mean follow-up was 20 (range, 4.5–41) months with 98% overall graft and patient survival. At 1 year of analysis, steroid-free recipients showed significant improvements for clinical acute rejection (8%), graft function, hypertension, and growth, without increased infectious complications. Leukopenia, anemia, and allograft nephrotoxicity were addressed by solely decreasing MMF and tacrolimus dosing and/or by replacing MMF with sirolimus, without increasing acute rejection. Early daclizumab levels of more than 5 &mgr;g/mL were observed for the first time in children of all ages. Conclusions. Pediatric renal transplantation is safe without steroids. Daclizumab first-dose doubling and extended use for 6 months replaces steroids effectively without evidence of overimmunosuppression and may be the pivotal cause for the reduced acute rejection seen in this trial. This pilot study provides preliminary data to test this protocol in a prospective, multicenter randomized study.


Immunological Reviews | 1994

Endothelial Cell Activation and Thromboregulation during Xenograft Rejection

Fritz H. Bach; Simon C. Robson; Christiane Ferran; Hans Winkler; Maria T. Millan; Karl M. Stuhlmeier; Bernard Vanhove; Martin L. Blabcely; Willem J. Van der Werf; Erhard Hofer; Rainer de Martin; Wayne W. Hancock

Xenoreactive natural antibodies (XNA) and complement (C) are thought to be the two major inciting factors that result in hyperacute rejection (HAR) of an immediately vascularized, discordant xenograft within minutes to a very few hours, with destruction and infarction of the transplanted organ. If recipients are modified by various experimental modalities, such as removal and suppression of XNAand C-mediated responses, thus avoiding HAR, the process of delayed xenograft rejection (DXR) with a significant vascular component still occurs after a delay of several days or, at the most, a few weeks (Bach et al. 1993). The end result in both instances is the invariable and unacceptable loss of xenografts, which currently limits application of xenotransplantation beyond experimental protocols. The mechanisms underlying DXR are far from clear but appear not necessarily to involve XNAand C-mediated responses as those noted in HAR. Moreover, DXR can occur without the prominent participation of T lymphocytes. One of us (FHB) has suggested that the final common pathogenic mechanisms underly-


Transplantation | 2002

Mixed chimerism and immunosuppressive drug withdrawal after HLA-mismatched kidney and hematopoietic progenitor transplantation.

Maria T. Millan; Judith A. Shizuru; Hoffmann P; Sussan Dejbakhsh-Jones; John D. Scandling; Grumet Fc; Jane C. Tan; Oscar Salvatierra; Richard T. Hoppe; Samuel Strober

Background. Rodents and dogs conditioned with total-lymphoid irradiation (TLI), with or without antithymocyte globulin (ATG), have been shown to develop mixed chimerism and immune tolerance without graft-versus-host disease (GVHD) after the infusion of major histocompatability complex (MHC)-mismatched donor bone marrow cells given alone or in combination with an organ allograft. Methods. Four human leukocyte antigen (HLA)-mismatched recipients of living donor kidney transplants were conditioned with TLI and ATG posttransplantation and infused with cyropreserved donor granulocyte colony-stimulating factor (G-CSF) “mobilized” hematopoietic progenitor (CD34+) cells (3–5×106 cells/kg) thereafter. Maintenance prednisone and cyclosporine dosages were tapered, and recipients were monitored for chimerism, GVHD, graft function, T-cell subsets in the blood, and antidonor reactivity in the mixed leukocyte reaction (MLR). Results. Three of the four patients achieved multilineage macrochimerism, with up to 16% of donor-type cells among blood mononuclear cells without evidence of GVHD. Prolonged depletion of CD4+ T cells was observed in all four patients. Rejection episodes were not observed in the three macrochimeric recipients, and immunosuppressive drugs were withdrawn in the first patient by 12 months. Prednisone was withdrawn from a second patient at 9 months, and cyclosporine was tapered thereafter. Conclusions. Multilineage macrochimerism can be achieved without GVHD in HLA-mismatched recipients of combined kidney and hematopoietic progenitor transplants. Conditioning of the host with posttransplant TLI and ATG was nonmyeloablative and was not associated with severe infections. Recipients continue to be studied for the development of immune tolerance.


American Journal of Transplantation | 2012

Tolerance and Withdrawal of Immunosuppressive Drugs in Patients Given Kidney and Hematopoietic Cell Transplants

John D. Scandling; Stephan Busque; Sussan Dejbakhsh-Jones; Claudia Benike; Minnie M. Sarwal; Maria T. Millan; Judith A. Shizuru; Robert Lowsky; Edgar G. Engleman; Samuel Strober

Sixteen patients conditioned with total lymphoid irradiation (TLI) and antithymocyte globulin (ATG) were given kidney transplants and an injection of CD34+ hematopoietic progenitor cells and T cells from HLA‐matched donors in a tolerance induction protocol. Blood cell monitoring included changes in chimerism, balance of T‐cell subsets and responses to donor alloantigens. Fifteen patients developed multilineage chimerism without graft‐versus‐host disease (GVHD), and eight with chimerism for at least 6 months were withdrawn from antirejection medications for 1–3 years (mean, 28 months) without subsequent rejection episodes. Four chimeric patients have just completed or are in the midst of drug withdrawal, and four patients were not withdrawn due to return of underlying disease or rejection episodes. Blood cells from all patients showed early high ratios of CD4+CD25+ regulatory T cells and NKT cells versus conventional naive CD4+ T cells, and those off drugs showed specific unresponsiveness to donor alloantigens. In conclusion, TLI and ATG promoted the development of persistent chimerism and tolerance in a cohort of patients given kidney transplants and hematopoietic donor cell infusions. All 16 patients had excellent graft function at the last observation point with or without maintenance drugs.


Transplantation | 1996

Direct activation of porcine endothelial cells by human natural killer cells

David J. Goodman; von Albertini M; Willson A; Maria T. Millan; Fritz H. Bach

Endothelial cell (EC) activation is a consistent feature of discordant xenograft rejection. Treatment of xenograft recipients with complement inhibitors and xenoreactive natural antibody depletion leads to delayed xenograft rejection associated with a cellular infiltrate comprising up to 20% natural killer (NK) cells. To determine the importance of NK cells in xenograft rejection, we studied EC activation and cytotoxicity in co-cultures containing human NK cells and porcine EC. The addition of freshly isolated NK cells to porcine EC resulted in EC cell activation, characterized by the induction of mRNA and protein for the adhesion molecule E-selectin and the chemotactic cytokine interleukin (IL)-8. The induction of E-selectin and IL-8 occurred with three separate sources of NK cells: purified CD56+ve cells, the NK cell clone B22, and the Fc receptor-deficient NK cell line NK92. Transwell cultures demonstrated that direct NK-EC contact was required for the EC induction of E-selectin and IL-8. These effects could not be inhibited with human recombinant tumor necrosis factor-alpha receptor, and the transfer of supernatants or cell lysates from activated EC to secondary cultures did not result in EC activation. The addition of human IgG enhanced the level of E-selectin expression and cellular cytotoxicity, and resulted in tumor necrosis factor-alpha and interferon-gamma secretion. Thus, human NK cells can lyse or activate EC by direct cell contact and the addition of IgG enhances EC activation and NK cell cytokine secretion. These findings implicate NK cells in EC activation and cell-mediated xenograft rejection.


Transplantation | 2003

One hundred percent patient and kidney allograft survival with simultaneous liver and kidney transplantation in infants with primary hyperoxaluria: A single-center experience

Maria T. Millan; William E. Berquist; Samuel So; Minnie M. Sarwal; Karen I. Wayman; Kenneth L. Cox; Guido Filler; Oscar Salvatierra; Carlos O. Esquivel

Background. Combined liver-kidney transplantation is the definitive treatment for end-stage renal disease caused by primary hyperoxaluria type I (PH1). The infantile form is characterized by renal failure early in life, advanced systemic oxalosis, and a formidable mortality rate. Although others have reported on overall results of transplantation for PH1 covering a wide age spectrum, none has specifically addressed the high-risk infantile form of the disease. Methods. Six infants with PH1 underwent simultaneous liver-kidney transplantation at our center between May 1994 and August 1998. Diagnosis was made at 5.2±3.3 months of age, they were on dialysis for 11.8±2.3 months, and they underwent transplantation at 14.8±3.0 months of age when they weighed 10.6±1.7 kg. Results. At a mean follow-up of 6.4±1.7 years (range, 3.9–8.1 years), we report 100% patient and kidney allograft survival. There were no cases of acute tubular necrosis. Long-term kidney allograft function remained stable in all patients, with serum creatinine values of less than 1.1 mg/dL and a mean creatinine clearance of 99 mL/min/1.73 m2 at follow-up. Those who received combined hemodialysis and peritoneal dialysis pretransplant had lower posttransplant urinary oxalate values than those receiving peritoneal dialysis alone. There was improvement in growth and psychomotor and mental developmental scores after transplantation. Conclusions. Combined liver-kidney transplantation for the infantile presentation of PH1 is associated with excellent outcome when the approach includes early diagnosis and early combined transplantation, aggressive pretransplant dialysis, and avoidance of posttransplant renal dysfunction.


Transplantation | 2000

Adult-size kidneys without acute tubular necrosis provide exceedingly superior long-term graft outcomes for infants and small children: a single center and UNOS analysis. United Network for Organ Sharing.

Minnie M. Sarwal; J. Michael Cecka; Maria T. Millan; Oscar Salvatierra

BACKGROUND Infants with end-stage renal disease are at highest risk for early graft loss and mortality of any subgroup undergoing renal transplantation. This study evaluates the influence of donor tissue mass and acute tubular necrosis (ATN) on graft survival and incidence of acute rejection episodes in infant and small child recipients of living donor (LD) and cadaver (CAD) adult-size kidneys (ASKs), pediatric CAD kidneys and combined kidney-liver transplants. Methods. Kidney transplants in infants and small children at a single center and those reported to the UNOS Scientific Renal Transplant Registry were analyzed. At Stanford, multi-variate analysis was conducted on 45 consecutive renal allograft recipients weighing < or = 15 kg, mean weight 11.2 +/- 2.6 kg. The UNOS Registry results in age groups 0-2.5 (n=548) and 2.5-5 years (n=743) were compared with age groups 6-12, 13-18, and the lowest risk adult group of 19-45 years. STANFORD RESULTS. Graft survival was 97.8 +/- 0.0 at 2 years and 84.6 +/- 0.1% at 8 years. The incidence of biopsy proven rejection was 8.8% in the first 3 months and 15.5% over the 8-year follow-up. None of the pediatric CAD kidneys had ATN. Rejection episodes were restricted to the pediatric CAD kidneys alone (3/3), with no kidney rejections in the combined pediatric CAD kidney-liver transplants (0/6; P=0.003). Four ASK transplants had ATN (1 postoperative and 3 late), and all predisposed to subsequent acute rejection episodes (4/4), whereas there were no rejection episodes in ASK transplants without ATN (0/32; P<0.001). At 3 years posttransplantation, mean serum creatinines were worse in ASKs with ATN (1.5 vs. 0.9 mg/dL; P<0.001) and in all grafts with rejection episodes (1.2 vs. 0.9 mg/dL; P<0.05). UNOS RESULTS: Among the 5 age groups studied, significantly better (P<0.001) long-term graft survival rates were observed in allograft recipients in the 2 youngest age groups with ASKs without ATN: 82 +/- 3% and 81 +/- 3% for LD and 70 +/- 7% and 78 +/- 4% for CAD recipients in the 0-2.5 and 2.5- to 5-year age groups, respectively, at 6 years after transplantation. Moreover, the projected graft half-lives after the 1st year in the LD groups without ATN were at least equivalent to those of HLA-identical sibling recipients ages 19-45 years: 26.3 +/- 5 and 29.3 +/- 6 years for the 0- to 2.5- and 2.5- to 5-year age groups, respectively, and 23.3 +/- 1 years for HLA-identical transplants. The graft half-lives for CAD recipients without ATN ages 0-2.5 and 2.5-5 yearswere equivalent or better than those for LD transplants without ATN in recipients aged 19-45 years: 15.4+/- 7 and 23.7 +/- 8 years versus 15.0 +/- 0.3 years. Mean serum creatinines were superior in the 2 younger recipient age groups compared with older age groups. CONCLUSIONS Increased donor tissue mass of the ASK or kidney-liver transplants, in the absence of ATN, seems to confer a protective effect to infant and small child recipients of these allografts. This is manifested by a prolonged rejection-free state in the single center experience and enhanced graft survival and function in the UNOS analysis, comparable to HLA identical sibling transplants for LD infant and small child recipients and to LD adult results for CAD infant and small child recipients. To optimize this protective effect by whatever mechanism, absolute avoidance of ATN is essential in infant recipients of ASK or combined kidney-liver transplants.


Transplantation | 2004

Dual-kidney transplantation with organs from expanded criteria donors: a long-term follow-up.

Jane C. Tan; Edward J. Alfrey; Donald C. Dafoe; Maria T. Millan; John D. Scandling

Background. Since 1995, dual-kidney transplantation using organs from marginal donors has been used at our center to expand the organ donor pool and decrease the waiting time for deceased donor kidney transplantation. This approach has allowed for a shorter waiting period without compromising outcome in the early posttransplant period. We now have 8-year follow-up in the first recipients. Older individuals were offered this option preferentially, because we reasoned that they would stand to benefit most from the shorter waiting period. Methods. Patients aged 55 years or more who underwent either dual-kidney transplantation with expanded criteria donors or single-kidney transplantation with standard donors were included in this study. All expanded criteria donor organs were those that were refused by all other local transplant centers. The primary endpoints were recipient death and graft failure. Results. Waiting time for dual-kidney transplantation was 440±38 days versus 664±51 days for single-kidney transplantation (P<0.01). The 8-year actuarial patient survivals for the single- and dual-kidney transplants were 74.1% and 82.1%, respectively. The 8-year actuarial graft survivals for the single- and dual-kidney transplants were 59.4% and 69.7%, respectively. Conclusions. Eight-year actuarial patient and graft survivals in older individuals who underwent dual-kidney transplantation are equivalent to those who underwent standard single-kidney transplantation. With the continuing organ shortage and increasing waiting times for cadaver kidney transplantation, dual-kidney transplantation using organs that would otherwise be discarded offers a good option for older individuals who may not withstand a long waiting period.

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Fritz H. Bach

Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center

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Christiane Ferran

Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center

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David J. Goodman

St. Vincent's Health System

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