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Featured researches published by Oscar Salvatierra.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2007

Identification of a peripheral blood transcriptional biomarker panel associated with operational renal allograft tolerance

Sophie Brouard; Elaine Mansfield; Christophe Braud; Li Li; Magali Giral; Szu-Chuan Hsieh; Dominique Baeten; Meixia Zhang; Joanna Ashton-Chess; Cécile Braudeau; Frank Hsieh; Alexandre Dupont; Annaik Pallier; Anne Moreau; Stéphanie Louis; Catherine Ruiz; Oscar Salvatierra; Jean-Paul Soulillou; Minnie M. Sarwal

Long-term allograft survival generally requires lifelong immunosuppression (IS). Rarely, recipients display spontaneous “operational tolerance” with stable graft function in the absence of IS. The lack of biological markers of this phenomenon precludes identification of potentially tolerant patients in which IS could be tapered and hinders the development of new tolerance-inducing strategies. The objective of this study was to identify minimally invasive blood biomarkers for operational tolerance and use these biomarkers to determine the frequency of this state in immunosuppressed patients with stable graft function. Blood gene expression profiles from 75 renal-transplant patient cohorts (operational tolerance/acute and chronic rejection/stable graft function on IS) and 16 healthy individuals were analyzed. A subset of samples was used for microarray analysis where three-class comparison of the different groups of patients identified a “tolerant footprint” of 49 genes. These biomarkers were applied for prediction of operational tolerance by microarray and real-time PCR in independent test groups. Thirty-three of 49 genes correctly segregated tolerance and chronic rejection phenotypes with 99% and 86% specificity. The signature is shared with 1 of 12 and 5 of 10 stable patients on triple IS and low-dose steroid monotherapy, respectively. The gene signature suggests a pattern of reduced costimulatory signaling, immune quiescence, apoptosis, and memory T cell responses. This study identifies in the blood of kidney recipients a set of genes associated with operational tolerance that may have utility as a minimally invasive monitoring tool for guiding IS titration. Further validation of this tool for safe IS minimization in prospective clinical trials is warranted.


Annals of Surgery | 1980

Deliberate donor-specific blood transfusions prior to living related renal transplantation. A new approach.

Oscar Salvatierra; Flavio Vincenti; William Amend; Donald Potter; Y. Iwaki; Gerhard Opelz; Paul I. Terasaki; Robert Duca; Kent C. Cochrum; Deanne M. Hanes; Ronald J. Stoney; Nicholas J. Feduska

In order to select MLC incompatible one-haplotype related donor-recipient pairs that would achieve better graft survival and in an effort to alter the recipient immune response, 45 patients received three fresh blood transfusions from their prospective kidney donors. Recipient sensitization was evaluated by cross-match testing weekly sera obtained during and after the blood transfusions against donor T- and B-lymphocytes at 5 C (cold) and 37 C (warm). Thirteen (29%) of the 45 potential related recipients developed a positive warm T-cell cross-match or a persistent warm B-cell cross-match to their blood donor and related transplantation was not performed. Thirty-two (71%) patients had an appropriate negative cross-match to their blood donor. Thirty of these patients subsequently received kidneys from their blood donor. Ninety-seven per cent of the kidneys are functioning from one to 25 months with a single graft failure due to a patient discontinuing immunosuppressive medication. In addition to the excellent graft survival there was an unusually low incidence of rejection episodes in the recipients of kidneys from their blood donor so that the posttransplant course paralleled that of HLA-identical siblings. This approach may have future application with two-haplotype mismatched donor-recipient pairs, both related and unrelated.


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.


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.


The American Journal of Medicine | 1980

The Role of Hypertension in Hemodialysis-Associated Atherosclerosis

Flavio Vincenti; William Amend; John Abele; Nicholas J. Feduska; Oscar Salvatierra

Atherosclerosis in 50 nondiabetic patients undergoing hemodialysis was assessed at the time of renal transplantation by intraoperative examination and histologic evaluation of the iliac vasculature. Patients were grouped accordingly: minimal (group 1), moderate (group 2) or severe (group 3) atherosclerosis. Sixty-two per cent of the patients had atherosclerosis, half of them with severe involvement. No sex differences were noted. There was a significant correlation between the patients age and the degree of atherosclerosis (p less than 0.02). Thirty-five per cent of the patients under 30 years of age had atherosclerosis whereas similarly studied nonuremic control subjects had no atherosclerosis. Metabolic and lipid abnormalities, and duration of hemodialysis did not correlate with degree of atherosclerosis. Hypertension was present in 90 per cent of the patients in groups 2 and 3. When patients between the ages of 25 and 40 years were selected, atherosclerosis was present only in previously hypertensive patients (p less than 0.02). Atherosclerosis may not be accelerated by hemodialysis and may be prevented by more stringent control of hypertension in uremia.


JAMA Internal Medicine | 1988

Access to Kidney Transplantation: Has the United States Eliminated Income and Racial Differences?

Philip J. Held; Mark V. Pauly; Randall R. Bovbjerg; John Newmann; Oscar Salvatierra

We analyzed the effect of patient and dialysis unit characteristics on access to kidney transplantation using several different approaches, including an analysis of individual patient data from a systematic random sample of 2900 new dialysis patients from each year 1981 to 1985 (14721 patients total). Additional analyses focused on the composition of transplant waiting lists and aggregate data from a 1984 census of 1133 dialysis and transplant units. White, male, young, nondiabetic, high-income patients treated in smaller units are more likely to receive a cadaver transplant under Medicare than are other kidney patients. Profit status of the dialysis unit was not found to be correlated to access to transplantation, although size of the unit may be correlated to access. Future analysis should focus on whether patient access has been inappropriately compromised. Possible factors unexplored in this analysis include differential patient preferences and medical suitability, as well as differential medical access.


Pediatric Nephrology | 1990

The 1989 report of the North American Pediatric Renal Transplant Cooperative Study - This report is prepared under the auspices of the scientific advisory committee of the North American Pediatric Renal Transplant Cooperative Study

Steven R. Alexander; Gerald S. Arbus; Khalid M.H. Butt; Susan Conley; Richard N. Fine; Ira Greifer; Alan B. Gruskin; William E. Harmon; Paul T. McEnery; Thomas E. Nevins; Nadia Nogueira; Oscar Salvatierra; Amir Tejani

This report of the North American Pediatric Transplant Cooperative Study summarizes data contributed by 57 participating centers on 754 children with 761 transplants from 1 January 1989 to 16 February 1989. Data collection was initiated in October 1987 and follow-up of all patients is ongoing. Transplant frequency increased with age; 24% of the patients were less than 5 years, with 7% being under 2 years. Common frequent diagnoses were: aplastic/dysplastic kidneys (18%), obstructive uropathy (16%), and focal segmental glomerulosclerosis (12%). Preemptive transplant, i.e., transplantation without prior maintenance dialysis, was performed in 21% of the patients. Dialytic modalities pretransplant were peritoneal dialysis in 42% and hemodialysis in 25%. Bilateral nephrectomy was reported in 29%. Live-donor sources accounted for 42% of the transplants. Among cadaveric donors, 41% of the donors were under 11 years old. During the first post-transplant month, maintenance therapy was used similarly for live-donor and cadaver source transplants, with prednisone, cyclosporine, and azathioprine used in 93%, 83%, and 81%, respectively. Triple therapy with prednisone, cyclosporine, and azathioprine was used in 78%, 75%, and 75% of functioning cadaver source transplants at 6 months, 12 months, and 18 months as opposed to 60%, 63%, and 54% for live-donor procedures, with single-drug therapy being uncommon. Rehospitalization during months 1–5 occurred in 62% of the patients, with treatment of rejection and infection being the main causes. Additionally, 9% were hospitalized for hypertension. During months 6–12 and 12–17, 30% and 28% of the patients with functioning grafts were rehospitalized. Times to first rejection differed significantly for cadaver and live-donor transplants. The median time to the first rejection was 36 days for cadaver transplants and 156 days for live-donor transplants. Overall, 57% of treated rejections were completely reversible although the complete reversal rate decreased to 37% for four or more rejections. One hundred and fifty-two graft failures had occurred at the time of writing, with a 1-year graft survival estimate of 0.88 for live-donor and 0.71 for cadaver source transplants. In addition to donor source, recipient age is a significant prognostic factor for graft survival. Among cadaver donors, decreasing donor age is associated with a decreasing probability of graft survival. Thirty-five deaths have occurred; 16 attributed to infection and 19 to other causes. The current 1-year survival estimate is 0.94. There have been 9 malignancies.


Transplantation | 1983

Long-term renal function in kidney donors. Sustained compensatory hyperfiltration with no adverse effects.

Flavio Vincenti; William Amend; George A. Kaysen; Nicholas J. Feduska; Jytte Birnbaum; Rob Duca; Oscar Salvatierra

Twenty patients who underwent uninephrectomy for kidney donation between 1964 and 1968 participated in a long-term study of the function of the solitary kidney. Mean follow up after uninephrectomy was 15.8 +/- .3 years. One patient with a strong family history of essential hypertension developed de novo mild hypertension. The current creatinine clearance of the donors was 80 +/- 4 ml/min. The 1-week, 3-6 months and 14-18 years postuninephrectomy percentages of predonation creatinine clearance were 72 +/- 3%, 76 +/- 3% and 78 +/- 2%, respectively. The 24-hr urine protein excretion in kidney donors was significantly higher than in controls (141 +/- 20 mg vs. 74 +/- 3 mg, respectively, P less than .0005). Except for one donor who may have developed glomerulonephritis, the donors had normal urinary albumin excretion. The cause of the slightly elevated nonalbumin proteinuria is not known. However, this long-term study of kidney donors shows no adverse effects on the blood pressure and renal function after many years of compensatory hyperfiltration.


Journal of The American Society of Nephrology | 2009

Expression of Complement Components Differs Between Kidney Allografts from Living and Deceased Donors

Maarten Naesens; Li Li; Lihua Ying; Poonam Sansanwal; Tara K. Sigdel; Szu-Chuan Hsieh; Neeraja Kambham; Evelyne Lerut; Oscar Salvatierra; Atul J. Butte; Minnie M. Sarwal

A disparity remains between graft survival of renal allografts from deceased donors and from living donors. A better understanding of the molecular mechanisms that underlie this disparity may allow the development of targeted therapies to enhance graft survival. Here, we used microarrays to examine whole genome expression profiles using tissue from 53 human renal allograft protocol biopsies obtained both at implantation and after transplantation. The gene expression profiles of living-donor kidneys and pristine deceased-donor kidneys (normal histology, young age) were significantly different before reperfusion at implantation. Deceased-donor kidneys exhibited a significant increase in renal expression of complement genes; posttransplantation biopsies from well-functioning, nonrejecting kidneys, regardless of donor source, also demonstrated a significant increase in complement expression. Peritransplantation phenomena, such as donor death and possibly cold ischemia time, contributed to differences in complement pathway gene expression. In addition, complement gene expression at the time of implantation was associated with both early and late graft function. These data suggest that complement-modulating therapy may improve graft outcomes in renal transplantation.

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William Amend

University of California

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Li Li

Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

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Maarten Naesens

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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Tara K. Sigdel

University of California

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Robert Duca

University of California

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Folkert O. Belzer

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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