This invention relates to organ transplants and, in particular, to a nonsurgical method and system for the determination of organ transplant condition such as acceptance or rejection.
There are about 52,000 people in the United States on waiting lists for kidney transplants. In addition, 60,000 people die each year of kidney disease. Between 1996 and 1998, 94,000 kidney transplants were done in the United States. The number of rejected kidneys in 1996 was 6% from live donors and 12% from dead donors. Other reports mention that one out of three people receiving kidney transplants have at least one kidney rejection episode. A Johns Hopkins study in 2002 mentions 12,000 kidneys are transplanted annually with 5,000 of these from live donors. However, one-third of these transplants find that the donors are not good matches.
The large percentage of kidney rejections is due to actions of the immune system. This problem is normally minimized by careful selection of donors to match the recipients, followed by the application of a form of chemotherapy to reduce the immune system response to the newly transplanted organ. The chemotherapy drugs normally used are cyclosporine and, more recently, daclizumab. These chemotherapy drugs are also accompanied by immune-suppressing steroids. Another method to minimize rejection is to filter out donor-specific antibodies from the blood of the patient; this is referred to as plasmapheresis.
These methods are often insufficient, resulting in rejection of the organ by the recipient. In acute rejection, which can begin within 24 hours of transplantation and occurs over days to weeks, the immune system recognizes certain proteins on the surface of cells in the transplanted organ as ligands and prepares antibodies to attack the cells of the organ. The immune system produces B cell lymphocytes that generate antibodies that attach to these ligands to destroy them, as well as T cells (T lymphocytes) which react against these foreign cell-surface proteins on the transplanted cells. The most important of the proteins recognizing as foreign cells are the major histocompatability complex (MHC) that appear on all invertebrate cells and are the human-leukocyte-associated antigens (HLA antigens). The presence of these lymphocytes, primarily mediated by T cells, indicates that the organ is being rejected. The T cells recognize the MHC proteins that have bound to the foreign proteins on the surface of the host cells and they also recognize foreign MHC proteins that may be present. The antibodies CD* and CD4 are co-receptors on T cells where CD8 is expressed primarily on cytotoxic T cells recognizing Class I MHC proteins and CD4 is expressed primarily on helper T cells and Class II MHC proteins.
There are a large number of lymphocyte cells in the body, ˜1012, that primarily reside in the lymphatic system and the lymphoid organs (thymus, spleen and appendix). Lymphocytic cells are not normally present in any amounts in other organs, but on recognition of a foreign substance they exponentially multiply and invade the organ. The patient will suffer with fever or other responses to this occurring and a biopsy of the transplant is typically made to determine the presence of lymphocytes through microscopic observation or other means. There is an initial period of inflammation after the transplant due to the surgery damage itself which must also be taken into account in any studies of this type.
Organ transplant monitoring by biopsy is painful, risks infection, and causes morbidity. Therefore, a need remains for a system and method for the nonsurgical determination of organ transplant acceptance.
This application is related to U.S. provisional application 61/314,370, filed Mar. 16, 2010, which application is incorporated herein by reference. The present invention provides a system and method for nonsurgical determination of organ transplant condition such as acceptance or rejection. The system comprises a magnetic field detector, such as a superconducting quantum interference device sensor, comprising a magnetic pulser, adapted to apply a uniform magnetizing pulse field to a transplanted organ of a patient placed on a measurement stage; and a remnant magnetic field detector, adapted to detect and image the residual magnetic field produced by the applied pulsed field. The magnetic pulser can comprise a pair of Helmholtz coils. The remnant magnetic field detector can comprise an array of gradiometers. An example method according to the present invention comprises providing a superconducting quantum interference device sensor system; injecting a plurality of antibody-labeled magnetic nanoparticles into a patient placed on a measurement stage for specific binding to the transplanted organ; applying a uniform magnetizing pulse field to magnetize the nanoparticles injected into the patient; and detecting the residual magnetic field of the magnetized nanoparticles thereby providing an image of the nanoparticles bound to the transplanted organ of the patient. For example, the transplanted organ can comprise a kidney. The antibody-labeled magnetic nanoparticle can comprise a magnetic core coated with a biocompatible coating to which is attached at least one specific antibody. For example, the magnetic core can comprise a ferromagnetic material, such as iron oxide. For example, the antibody-labeled magnetic nanoparticles can comprise antibodies that specifically bind to T cells.
The accompanying drawings, which are incorporated in and form part of the specification, illustrate the present invention and, together with the description, describe the invention. In the drawings, like elements are referred to by like numbers.
The present invention can use a Superconducting Quantum Interference Device (SQUID) magnetic sensor for the nonsurgical determination of organ transplant condition such as status, acceptance, or rejection. The SQUID sensor is a highly sensitive instrument that can detect magnetic fields created by clusters of magnetic nanoparticles. The SQUID sensor enables non-invasive determination of organ transplant acceptance. Additionally, the non-invasive nature of the technology allows more frequent monitoring of the patient, compared to biopsy. The physician can also use this technology to calibrate the level of medication if it appears that T cells have infiltrated the transplanted organ.
T cells congregate in specific areas of the organ. Biopsy only removes a small sample of tissue from the organ and does not sample the organ as a whole. The present invention can enable the physician to image the entire organ. This allows a physician to assess what degree of organ rejection, if any, is occurring in the patient. This reduces the need for invasive biopsy procedures and enables the monitoring of an organ transplant for the effects of chemotherapy. For example, the ability to assess and quantify the population of CD8 T cells in a specific organ transplant can complement and often replace the existing method of organ transplant monitoring (biopsy). The technology enables accurately assessing the immune system response to the organ transplant to determine if acute or chronic rejection is taking place. The invention can also provide the ability to monitor CD8 as well as CD4 T cells.
A biomagnetic SQUID sensor can be used together with antibody-labeled-magnetic nanoparticles to detect the buildup of clusters of excess lymphocytes in a transplanted organ. This system reduces the need for biopsies and provides a non-invasive method for monitoring the effectiveness of immune-suppressive drugs. This method easily identifies these lymphocyte cells. Reduction of biopsies is of great patient benefit since the biopsies are painful and there is reasonable chance for infection. Infection is of great concern since patients often have a reduced immune system response due to the chemotherapy. Thus, any method which can significantly eliminate the need for invasive procedures can have substantial impact on the patient's well being.
Table 1 shows the comparison between physically measured locations of the live T-cells shown in the phantom of
A demonstration of the method of determining transplant rejection was carried out using an animal model in which skin transplants were made to mice of the same genetic background as the donor (a white mouse) and to different backgrounds (a black mouse). When these mice were injected with magnetic nanoparticles with antibodies directed for the T-cells that attack organs of unrelated donors, the white mice showed no sign of T-cells in the vicinity of the transplant whereas the black mice showed millions of the T-cells present; i.e., a sign of rejection of the transplant. This was verified by subsequent falling off of the transplant on the black mouse while the transplant on the white mouse integrated into the skin.
An animal model involving skin transplantation was used. In this model, normal mice have a patch of skin removed from the dorsal scapular region, then back or tail skin from a mouse of a different strain was applied to the exposed area (allogenic graft). Alternatively, the mouse had a section of skin from a genetically identical mouse applied as a control (isogenic graft). This transplant model was relatively simple to perform, and offered the advantage of allowing direct examination of graft success/rejection. Following these procedures, a skin patch from another animal was taken and applied in the same way and followed the same methods as developed for wound healing. After a fixed time, the mouse was injected with the nanoparticles conjugated with antibodies as developed in specific aim 3 for T-cells. The mouse was then placed under the SQUID system and magnetic remanence fields were measured. The mice were imaged at several time points during graft rejection, and following each SQUID imaging session, a small section of skin at the donor/recipient junction can be removed using a punch biopsy to confirm T cell infiltration.
The present invention has been described as a system and method for the nonsurgical determination of organ transplant acceptance. It will be understood that the above description is merely illustrative of the applications of the principles of the present invention, the scope of which is to be determined by the claims viewed in light of the specification. Other variants and modifications of the invention will be apparent to those of skill in the art.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/US11/28746 | 3/16/2011 | WO | 00 | 8/29/2012 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20120330133 A1 | Dec 2012 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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61314370 | Mar 2010 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 12337554 | Dec 2008 | US |
Child | 13581789 | US | |
Parent | 11957988 | Dec 2007 | US |
Child | 12337554 | US | |
Parent | 11940673 | Nov 2007 | US |
Child | 11957988 | US |