Fiji Sun

Chinese Scientists Discover Better Treatment for Liver Transplant Rejection

The researcher­s expect to bring this “smart” facile method of tacrolimus immune responsive release into the clinical trial phase in the near future.

- Xinhua

Chinese scientists have potentiall­y found a more effective solution to liver transplant rejection, which is life-threatenin­g when it occurs.

Liang Gaolin, head of a research team at the University of Science and Technology of China, has developed a new treatment for liver transplant rejection in collaborat­ion with two other teams led by Wang Xuehao and Wang Fuqiang from Nanjing Medical University. The findings, which were published in the latest issue of Advanced Materials, a Germanybas­ed scientific journal, have been proved effective in rats, but are yet to be tested in clinical trials.

Rejection is the biggest problem of organ transplant­s.

Findings published in the latest issue of Advanced Materials.

Immune suppressiv­e drugs such as tacrolimus are directly administer­ed to patients after their surgery for T-cell inhibition.

However, direct oral administra­tion of tacrolimus can result in severe side effects. Cell experiment­s on rats have shown that tacrolimus encapsulat­ed in two hydrogels when applied to the scar surface of the transplant has a better inhibition effect on the activated T-cells than free drug tacrolimus.

Liver transplant experiment­s indicate that, with the same dose of tacrolimus, rat recipients in the gel group showed a significan­tly extended median survival time of 22 days, while the rats treated with convention­al tacrolimus medication only had a median survival time of 13 days.

The researcher­s expect to bring this “smart” facile method of tacrolimus immune responsive release into the clinical trial phase in the near future.

 ?? Photo: Xinhua ?? Low-risk liver transplant­s? A new way of dosing found by Chinese scientists could lower the chance of organ rejection.
Photo: Xinhua Low-risk liver transplant­s? A new way of dosing found by Chinese scientists could lower the chance of organ rejection.

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