Our long-term goal is to promote transplant tolerance in pediatric liver transplant recipients so that immunosuppression and the associated morbidity and mortality risks can be eliminated. Transplant tolerance can spontaneously develop and be identified through immunosuppression withdrawal. However, data consistently show that rate of spontaneous tolerance is low early after transplantation and increases slowly over time as multiple toxicities accumulate. Children face a particularly onerous burden of immunosuppression, extending over a long lifespan. Therefore new therapies that facilitate tolerance induction are much needed. Research in the past 20 years has demonstrated that regulatory T cells are essential for immune tolerance to self-antigens and can be therapeutically harnessed to induce transplant tolerance. Recently concluded phase I clinical trials in graft versus host disease and an ongoing clinical trial in type 1 diabetes demonstrate that regulatory T cell therapy is safe and potentially efficacious in suppressing alloimmune responses. Here we propose to conduct an open label, phase I/II, multi-center clinical trial to determine the safety and potential efficacy of a single infusion of autologous, polyclonally expanded, regulatory T cells to induce tolerance in non- tolerant pediatric liver transplant recipients. We will also perform mechanistic studies using peripheral blood and biopsy samples collected from trial participants to improve our understanding of transplantation tolerance and the impact of regulatory T cells on alloimmune responses in humans. We have established a collaborative network of six clinical centers and four mechanistic cores that have unique and relevant expertise as well as many pre-existing collaborations to conduct this trial. We plan to enroll 25 children 2 to 6 years after liver transplantation and identify non-tolerant patients through highly supervised gradual immunosuppression withdrawal. Twelve non-tolerant patients will be stabilized with immunosuppression for 6 to 12 months before receiving an infusion of autologous expanded regulatory T cells. These participants will undergo second attempt of immunosuppression withdrawal to determine whether regulatory T cell therapy can induce tolerance. Global gene expression profiling of blood and biopsy samples, multi-parameter immunohistology of liver tissue, and multiplex plasma cytokine and chemokine analysis will be used to identify biomarkers of tolerance, differences in immune responses between tolerant and non-tolerant patients, and impact of regulatory T cells on the immune responses. This proposal is strongly resonates with the mission of NIAID and CTOT-C to promote understanding and reduce immune-mediated morbidity and mortality in vulnerable pediatric transplant recipients.

Public Health Relevance

The immunosuppression medications required to maintain a transplanted organ have serious toxic side effects that may be particularly damaging to children because of lifelong exposure starting at a very young age. Regulatory T cells are the immune system's self-control mechanism to suppress unwanted immune responses. We propose a clinical trial to evaluate the safety and efficacy of giving pediatric liver transplant recipients heir own regulatory T cells as a therapy to allow gradual discontinuation of all immunosuppression medications while maintaining normal function of their liver allograft.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID)
Type
Research Project--Cooperative Agreements (U01)
Project #
4U01AI104347-04
Application #
9005804
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZAI1)
Program Officer
Odim, Jonah
Project Start
2013-02-01
Project End
2018-01-31
Budget Start
2016-02-01
Budget End
2017-01-31
Support Year
4
Fiscal Year
2016
Total Cost
Indirect Cost
Name
University of California San Francisco
Department
Surgery
Type
Schools of Medicine
DUNS #
094878337
City
San Francisco
State
CA
Country
United States
Zip Code
94118
Feng, Sandy; Bucuvalas, John C; Demetris, Anthony J et al. (2018) Evidence of Chronic Allograft Injury in Liver Biopsies From Long-term Pediatric Recipients of Liver Transplants. Gastroenterology 155:1838-1851.e7
Tang, Qizhi; Vincenti, Flavio (2017) Transplant trials with Tregs: perils and promises. J Clin Invest 127:2505-2512
Furukawa, Akiko; Wisel, Steven A; Tang, Qizhi (2016) Impact of Immune-Modulatory Drugs on Regulatory T Cell. Transplantation 100:2288-2300
Tang, Q (2014) Pharmacokinetics of therapeutic Tregs. Am J Transplant 14:2679-80