H. Volk, B. Banas, F. Bemelman, O. Bestard, Sophie Brouard5, C. Cuturi, Josep M Grinyó, M. Hernandez-Fuentes, M. Koch, B. Nashan, I. Rebollo-Mesa, A. Sánchez‐Fueyo, B. Sawitzki, Ineke J M ten Berge, O. Viklicky, Kathryn Wood K, P. Reinke
{"title":"实现实体器官移植后生物标志物驱动免疫抑制的策略,由欧洲BIO-DrIM联盟内的学术-行业合作伙伴关系","authors":"H. Volk, B. Banas, F. Bemelman, O. Bestard, Sophie Brouard5, C. Cuturi, Josep M Grinyó, M. Hernandez-Fuentes, M. Koch, B. Nashan, I. Rebollo-Mesa, A. Sánchez‐Fueyo, B. Sawitzki, Ineke J M ten Berge, O. Viklicky, Kathryn Wood K, P. Reinke","doi":"10.18063/APM.2016.01.001","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Solid organ transplantation has emerged as the “gold standard” therapy for end-stage organ failure as it improves both quality of life and survival. Despite the progress in short-term graft survival, that is closely associated with the impressive reduction of acute rejections within the first year, long-term graft and patient survival remain almost unchanged and unsatisfactory. Incomplete control of chronic allograft injury but particularly the adverse effects of long-term immunosuppression, such as graft toxicity, diabetes, cardiovascular events, infections, and tumours continue to challenge the long-term success. In general, immunosuppression is applied as one-size-fits-all strategy. This can result in over- and under-immunosuppression of patients with low and high allo-responsiveness, respectively. Trial- and -error strategies to minimize or even completely wean of immunosuppression have a high failure rate. Consequently, there is an unmet medical need to develop biomarkers allowing objective risk stratification of transplant patients. To achieve this goal, we engaged in an academic-industrial partnership. The central focus of the European-wide BIO-DrIM consortium (BIOmarker-Driven IMmmunosuppression) is the implementation of biomarker-guided strategies for personalizing immunosuppress- ion to improve the long-term outcome and to decrease the adverse effects and costs of chronic immunosuppression in solid organ transplant patients. The concept includes four innovative investigator-driven clinical trials designed by the consortium.","PeriodicalId":345327,"journal":{"name":"Advances in Precision Medicine","volume":"1 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2016-03-17","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"1","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Strategy to achieve biomarker-driven immunosuppression after solid organ transplantation by an academic-industry partnership within the European BIO-DrIM consortium\",\"authors\":\"H. Volk, B. Banas, F. Bemelman, O. Bestard, Sophie Brouard5, C. Cuturi, Josep M Grinyó, M. Hernandez-Fuentes, M. Koch, B. Nashan, I. Rebollo-Mesa, A. Sánchez‐Fueyo, B. Sawitzki, Ineke J M ten Berge, O. Viklicky, Kathryn Wood K, P. Reinke\",\"doi\":\"10.18063/APM.2016.01.001\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"Solid organ transplantation has emerged as the “gold standard” therapy for end-stage organ failure as it improves both quality of life and survival. Despite the progress in short-term graft survival, that is closely associated with the impressive reduction of acute rejections within the first year, long-term graft and patient survival remain almost unchanged and unsatisfactory. Incomplete control of chronic allograft injury but particularly the adverse effects of long-term immunosuppression, such as graft toxicity, diabetes, cardiovascular events, infections, and tumours continue to challenge the long-term success. In general, immunosuppression is applied as one-size-fits-all strategy. This can result in over- and under-immunosuppression of patients with low and high allo-responsiveness, respectively. Trial- and -error strategies to minimize or even completely wean of immunosuppression have a high failure rate. Consequently, there is an unmet medical need to develop biomarkers allowing objective risk stratification of transplant patients. To achieve this goal, we engaged in an academic-industrial partnership. The central focus of the European-wide BIO-DrIM consortium (BIOmarker-Driven IMmmunosuppression) is the implementation of biomarker-guided strategies for personalizing immunosuppress- ion to improve the long-term outcome and to decrease the adverse effects and costs of chronic immunosuppression in solid organ transplant patients. 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Strategy to achieve biomarker-driven immunosuppression after solid organ transplantation by an academic-industry partnership within the European BIO-DrIM consortium
Solid organ transplantation has emerged as the “gold standard” therapy for end-stage organ failure as it improves both quality of life and survival. Despite the progress in short-term graft survival, that is closely associated with the impressive reduction of acute rejections within the first year, long-term graft and patient survival remain almost unchanged and unsatisfactory. Incomplete control of chronic allograft injury but particularly the adverse effects of long-term immunosuppression, such as graft toxicity, diabetes, cardiovascular events, infections, and tumours continue to challenge the long-term success. In general, immunosuppression is applied as one-size-fits-all strategy. This can result in over- and under-immunosuppression of patients with low and high allo-responsiveness, respectively. Trial- and -error strategies to minimize or even completely wean of immunosuppression have a high failure rate. Consequently, there is an unmet medical need to develop biomarkers allowing objective risk stratification of transplant patients. To achieve this goal, we engaged in an academic-industrial partnership. The central focus of the European-wide BIO-DrIM consortium (BIOmarker-Driven IMmmunosuppression) is the implementation of biomarker-guided strategies for personalizing immunosuppress- ion to improve the long-term outcome and to decrease the adverse effects and costs of chronic immunosuppression in solid organ transplant patients. The concept includes four innovative investigator-driven clinical trials designed by the consortium.