Use of polyclonal/monoclonal antibody therapies in transplantation

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Taylor and Francis Ltd

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Introduction: For over thirty years, antibody (mAb)-based therapies have been a standard component of transplant immunosuppression, and yet much remains to be learned in order for us to truly harness their therapeutic capabilities. Current mAbs used in transplant directly target and destroy graft-destructive immune cells, interrupt cytokine and costimulation-dependent T and B cell activation, and prevent down-stream complement activation. Areas covered: This review summarizes our current approaches to using antibody-based therapies to prevent and treat allograft rejection. It also provides examples of promising novel mAb therapies, and discusses the potential for future mAb development in transplantation. Expert opinion: The broad capability of antibodies, in parallel with our growing ability to synthetically modulate them, offers exciting opportunities to develop better biologic therapeutics. In order to do so, we must further our understanding about the basic biology underlying allograft rejection, and gain better appreciation of how characteristics of therapeutic antibodies affect their efficacy. © 2017 Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group.

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Acute cellular rejection, Alemtuzumab, Antibody mediated rejection, Antithymocyte globulin, Basiliximab, Belimumab, Eculizumab, Induction therapy, Monoclonal antibodies, Ratg, Rituximab, Thymoglobulin, Tocilizumab, Tol101, Transplant rejection, Transplantation, Animals, Antibodies, Antibodies, monoclonal, Graft rejection, Humans, Immunosuppression, Immunosuppressive agents, Interleukin 2 receptor antibody, Lanthanum, Lymphocyte antibody, Monoclonal antibody, Polyclonal antibody, Recombinant gamma interferon, Thymocyte antibody, Tol 101, Unclassified drug, Antibody, Immunosuppressive agent, Acute graft rejection, Adverse drug reaction, Cell proliferation, Cost minimization analysis, Drug efficacy, Drug mechanism, Human, Infection risk, Kidney transplantation, Leukopenia, Lymphoproliferative disease, Prophylaxis, Review, T lymphocyte activation, Animal, Immunology, Immunosuppressive treatment

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