NEWS RELEASES
04/25/02 News Release
PRINT MEDIA CONTACT: Amy Adams at (650) 723-3900 ()
BROADCAST MEDIA CONTACT: M.A. Malone at (650) 723-6912 (mamalone@stanford.edu)
STANFORD RESEARCHER DUSTS OFF OLD DRUG;
UNCOVERS NEW ANTI-REJECTION PROPERTIES
STANFORD, Calif. - Thirty years ago, researchers scooped
some dirt on Easter Island and discovered bacteria that led to a potential
anti-fungal drug. Little did they know that the drug - which languished
on shelves after proving ineffective in early trials - would become popular
in 1999 as a way to prevent rejection of transplanted organs.
Now, new studies from Stanford University Medical Center have found that the
drug can also protect blood vessels of transplanted hearts, preventing the
leading cause of heart transplant failure.
Randall Morris, MD, research professor and director of transplantation immunology
in the Department of Cardiothoracic Surgery, elevated the drug - called sirolimus
- from the brink of obscurity to its current role in transplantation. Morris
will present results from his recent studies April 30 at the American Transplant
Congress.
Acute transplant rejection occurs when cells of the immune system recognize
the transplanted organ as foreign and attack it as a potential threat. Powerful
immune-suppressing drugs - including sirolimus - keep the immune system under
wraps and prevent this immediate rejection.
Immune cells passing through blood vessels in the transplanted heart, however,
inflict a consistent, low-level attack on cells lining the vessel walls. In
response, these smooth-muscle cells build up scar tissue that may eventually
block the vessel and starve the heart of oxygen. This process, called chronic
rejection, is the most common cause of heart transplant failure. "To prevent
chronic rejection, you want to stop proliferation of smooth-muscle cells," Morris
said. His research shows that's exactly what sirolimus does.Laying the groundwork
In studies during the late 1980s, Morris transplanted hearts in rats using
sirolimus to prevent rejection. Not only did the rats avoid rejection problems,
but the hearts that received sirolimus had much cleaner blood vessels than
those that received a different anti-rejection drug. "We thought maybe
sirolimus did more than just suppress the recipient immune system," Morris
said. "Maybe it also acted on donor blood vessels."
These results inspired Morris and postdoctoral fellow Camille Dambrin, MD,
to test sirolimus on transplanted aortas - the major artery leaving the heart.
In their initial trials on rats and primates, delayed treatment with sirolimus
stopped the progression of chronic rejection once it had started. In the latest
work, the researchers tested whether sirolimus could prevent chronic rejection
altogether if the drug was started at the time of transplant.
They transplanted aortas in 12 primates: six received sirolimus throughout
the trial while six received a placebo. They monitored the internal diameter
of the transplanted vessels with ultrasound for 105 days. The animals that
received sirolimus had arteries that were nearly normal compared to the significantly
clogged arteries in animals that had received the placebo.
Morris said early results from this work led to the use of sirolimus to prevent
chronic rejection in human heart transplants. The federal Food and Drug Administration
approved the drug for use by transplant recipients in 1999. He added that worldwide
trials in human heart transplant recipients using sirolimus or a chemically
modified version show these drugs significantly prevent artery narrowing. Another
notable application
While preventing chronic rejection would be a major improvement for heart transplant
patients, the most significant use of sirolimus may address a different problem.
Cardiologists often use balloons to open clogged arteries in a process called
angioplasty. They then insert coiled wires called stents to hold the artery
open. Scar tissue can eventually build up around the stent, blocking blood
flow.
In recent trials, cardiologists implanted stents coated with sirolimus to prevent
this renewed division of the blood vessel wall. Two years later, those vessels
were still clear. "This is probably where our discovery of this new use
for sirolimus will benefit the most patients," Morris said. He said that
Johnson & Johnson is continuing to test a sirolimus-coated stent that may
reach the market within the next one or two years.
In addition to Morris and Dambrin, Stanford researchers in the study included
Bernard Hausen, MD, PhD, senior research scientist; Peter Fitzgerald, MD, associate
research professor of cardiovascular medicine; Gerald Berry, MD, associate
professor of pathology; and postdoctoral fellows Jochen Klupp, MD, Tudor Birsan,
MD, Jorge Luna, MD, Takeshi Suzuki, MD, Tuan Lam, MD, Peter Staehr, MD.
# # #
| |
|
The Stanford University School of Medicine consistently ranks among the nation’s top 10 medical schools, integrating research, medical education, patient care and community service. For more news about the school, please visit http://mednews.stanford.edu. The medical school is part of Stanford Medicine, which includes Stanford Hospital & Clinics and Lucile Packard Children’s Hospital. For information about all three, please visit http://stanfordmedicine.org/about/news.html.
