The field of vascularized composite allografts (VCAs) has undergone significant advancement in recent decades, and VCAs are increasingly common and accepted in the clinical setting, bringing hope of functional recovery to patients with debilitating injuries. A major obstacle facing the widespread application of VCAs is the side effect profile associated with the current immunosuppressive regimen, which can cause a wide array of complications such as in-fection, malignancy, and even death. Significant concerns remain regarding whether the treatment outweighs the risk. The potential solution to this dilemma would be achieving VCA tolerance, which would allow recipients to receive allografts without significant immunosup-pression and its sequelae. Promising tolerance protocols are being studied in kidney trans-plantation; four major trials have attempted to withdraw immunosuppressive treatment with various successes. The common theme in all four trials is the use of radiation treatment and donor cell transplantation. The knowledge gained from these trials can provide valuable insight into the development of a VCA tolerance protocol. Despite similarities, VCAs present ad-ditional barriers compared to kidney allografts regarding tolerance induction. VCA donors are likely to be deceased, which limits the time for significant pre-conditioning. VCA donors are also more likely to be human leukocyte antigen–mismatched, which means that tolerance must be induced across major immunological barriers. This review also explores adjunct ther-apies studied in large animal models that could be the missing element in establishing a safe and stable tolerance induction method.
CITATION STYLE
Yang, J. H., Johnson, A. C., Colakoglu, S., Huang, C. A., & Mathes, D. W. (2021, November 1). Clinical and preclinical tolerance protocols for vascularized composite allograft transplantation. Archives of Plastic Surgery. Korean Society of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgeons. https://doi.org/10.5999/APS.2021.00927
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