1. Reduced microglia activity in patients with long-term immunosuppressive therapy after liver transplantation.
- Author
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Dirks M, Buchert R, Wirries AK, Pflugrad H, Grosse GM, Petrusch C, Schütze C, Wilke F, Mamach M, Hamann L, Langer LBN, Ding XQ, Barg-Hock H, Klempnauer J, Wetzel CH, Lukacevic M, Janssen E, Kessler M, Bengel FM, Geworski L, Rupprecht R, Ross TL, Berding G, and Weissenborn K
- Subjects
- Brain metabolism, Humans, Immunosuppression Therapy adverse effects, Positron-Emission Tomography, Receptors, GABA metabolism, Liver Transplantation, Microglia metabolism
- Abstract
Purpose: Calcineurin inhibitors (CNI) can cause long-term impairment of brain function. Possible pathomechanisms include alterations of the cerebral immune system. This study used positron emission tomography (PET) imaging with the translocator protein (TSPO) ligand
18 F-GE-180 to evaluate microglial activation in liver-transplanted patients under different regimens of immunosuppression., Methods: PET was performed in 22 liver-transplanted patients (3 CNI free, 9 with low-dose CNI, 10 with standard-dose CNI immunosuppression) and 9 healthy controls. The total distribution volume (VT ) estimated in 12 volumes-of-interest was analyzed regarding TSPO genotype, CNI therapy, and cognitive performance., Results: In controls, VT was about 80% higher in high affinity binders (n = 5) compared to mixed affinity binders (n = 3). Mean VT corrected for TSPO genotype was significantly lower in patients compared to controls, especially in patients in whom CNI dose had been reduced because of nephrotoxic side effect., Conclusion: Our results provide evidence of chronic suppression of microglial activity in liver-transplanted patients under CNI therapy especially in patients with high sensitivity to CNI toxicity., (© 2021. The Author(s).)- Published
- 2021
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