Induction of tolerance to factor VIII by transient co-administration with rapamycin

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Abstract

Background: Formation of inhibitory antibodies is a frequent and serious complication of factor (F) VIII replacement therapy for the X-linked bleeding disorder hemophilia A. Similarly, hemophilia A mice develop high-titer inhibitors to recombinant human FVIII after a few intravenous injections. Objective: Using the murine model, the study sought to develop a short regimen capable of inducing tolerance to FVIII. Methods: A 1-month immunomodulatory protocol, consisting of FVIII administration combined with oral delivery of rapamycin, was developed. Results: The protocol effectively prevented formation of inhibitors to FVIII upon subsequent intravenous treatment (weekly for 3.5months). Control mice formed high-titer inhibitors and had CD4 + T effector cell responses characterized by expression of IL-2, IL-4 and IL-6. Tolerized mice instead had a CD4 +CD25 +FoxP3 + T cell response to FVIII that suppressed antibody formation upon adoptive transfer, indicating a shift from Th2 to Treg if FVIII antigen was introduced to T cells during inhibition with rapamycin. CD4 + T cells from tolerized mice also expressed TGF-β1 and CTLA4, but not IL-10. The presence of FVIII antigen during the time of rapamycin administration was required for specific tolerance induction. Conclusions: The study shows that a prophylactic immune tolerance protocol for FVIII can be developed using rapamycin, a drug that is already widely in clinical application. Immune suppression with rapamycin was mild and highly transient, as the mice regained immune competence within a few weeks. © 2011 International Society on Thrombosis and Haemostasis.

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Moghimi, B., Sack, B. K., Nayak, S., Markusic, D. M., Mah, C. S., & Herzog, R. W. (2011). Induction of tolerance to factor VIII by transient co-administration with rapamycin. Journal of Thrombosis and Haemostasis, 9(8), 1524–1533. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1538-7836.2011.04351.x

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