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Vol. 297, Issue 3, 1144-1151, June 2001
Transplantation Research, Novartis Pharmaceuticals, Summit, New
Jersey
We describe a high-capacity in vivo assay to measure drug-mediated
transplant immunosuppression using a mouse model of Sa1 tumor
rejection. Sa1 grew poorly and was rejected by 14 days in immunocompetent allogeneic recipient mice. In nude
(nu/nu) mice, Sa1 grew more rapidly and was not
rejected, confirming the T cell dependence of this response. In
immunocompetent animals, administration of immunosuppressive agents
resulted in increased tumor growth relative to vehicle-treated animals.
Treatment with immunosuppressive drugs such as cyclosporin A (CsA),
40-O-(2-hydroxyethyl)-rapamycin (SDZ RAD), or
2-amino-2-[2-(4-octylphenyl)ethyl]-1,2-propanediol hydrochloride
(FTY720) produced dose-dependent inhibition of tumor rejection. By
contrast, the drugs did not affect Sa1 tumor growth in
nu/nu mice, which is consistent with their predicted
indirect effect on tumor size by suppressing immunity, rather than by
directly stimulating Sa1 growth. Drug potency, which is usually not
described for immunosuppressive agents, was calculated from the linear
relationship between drug dose and tumor volume. The potency of CsA was
inversely related to the stringency of the histocompatibility barrier.
Another advantage of this assay is that the endpoint is an objective
size measurement over a short time period, compared with transplant models where the endpoint may not be reached for many weeks and may be
more subjective. In addition, this model can measure the potency of
combination drug treatments and compare new immunosuppressive drug
regimens. For example, the administration of SDZ RAD or FTY720 with CsA
resulted in a more than additive increase in potency, compared with the
sum of the drugs as single agents.
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