Rheumatoid arthritis drug improves kidneys for transplant

Researchers from Famerp, supported by Fapesp, tested anakinra to reduce inflammation in kidneys from deceased donors, enhancing their transplant viability. The study, awarded at the 2025 Latin American Transplant Congress, yielded promising results in pig kidneys. In Brazil, 60% to 70% of patients face post-transplant complications.

A study led by researchers from the Faculdade de Medicina de São José do Rio Preto (Famerp), funded by the Fundação de Amparo à Pesquisa do Estado de São Paulo (Fapesp), investigated the use of anakinra, an Anvisa-approved drug for rheumatoid arthritis, in preserving kidneys from deceased donors. Conducted in partnership with the University Medical Center Groningen in the Netherlands, the research used 24 pig kidneys, divided into three groups: untreated control, hypothermic perfusion with the drug at 4°C, and normothermic perfusion at 37°C.

Results showed a significant reduction in inflammatory cytokine expression, improving the organs' molecular profile without tissue damage. "We significantly reduced the expression of inflammatory cytokines in treated kidneys," reported lead author Ludimila Leite Marzochi. The drug blocked inflammation starting after brain death, worsened by cold storage.

In Brazil, 60% to 70% of recipients of kidneys from deceased donors develop temporary acute renal failure post-transplant, twice the rate in Europe and the US, due to factors like cold ischemia time and preservation conditions. "This means longer hospitalization, more comorbidities, and higher costs for the health system," explained study supervisor Mário Abbud-Filho.

While normothermic perfusion machines are effective, their high cost – about R$15,000 more per organ, raising SUS transplant costs by 50% – limits adoption, with only one center using them routinely. Anakinra offers an accessible alternative for traditional ice storage. Heloísa Cristina Caldas noted: "We know inflammation begins in the donor, right after brain death".

The study won best paper at the Latin American Transplant Congress in October 2025 in Paraguay. Next steps involve testing on discarded human kidneys in Indiana, USA, from 2026, and evaluation in static preservation methods.

Relaterade artiklar

Illustration of a Stanford researcher with briquilimab antibody vial in a lab, representing a new stem cell transplant method for Fanconi anemia.
Bild genererad av AI

Stanford-antikroppsregim möjliggör stamcells transplantationer utan strålning eller busulfan vid Fanconi-anemi

Rapporterad av AI Bild genererad av AI Faktagranskad

Ett Stanford Medicine-team rapporterar att en enda dos av anti-CD117-antikroppen briquilimab tillät tre barn med Fanconi-anemi att genomgå stamcells transplantationer utan strålning eller busulfan, och uppnådde nästan fullständig donorcellsintegration i en fas 1b-studie publicerad i Nature Medicine.

Brazil's Fiocruz, through its Farmanguinhos unit, has begun fully domestic production of tacrolimus, an immunosuppressant to prevent organ transplant rejection. The milestone stems from a Product Development Partnership (PDP) with Brazilian firm Libbs, which acquired manufacturing technology from India's Biocon. Farmanguinhos now becomes the sole supplier to the SUS public health system.

Rapporterad av AI Faktagranskad

Forskare vid Stanford Medicine har utvecklat en kombinerad transplantation av bloddstamceller och pankreasöceller som, hos möss, förebygger eller botar typ 1-diabetes med vävnad från immunologiskt icke-matchande donatorer. Metoden skapar ett hybridimmunsystem som stoppar autoimmuna attacker utan immunsuppressiva läkemedel och bygger på verktyg som redan används kliniskt, vilket tyder på att humana prövningar kan vara möjliga.

Organ donation is gaining momentum in Kerala, highlighted by inspiring stories of donors and recipients. In 2025, deceased donor numbers more than doubled, offering hope to thousands on waiting lists.

Rapporterad av AI

A health ministry expert panel has conditionally approved two regenerative medicine products derived from induced pluripotent stem (iPS) cells for treating Parkinson's disease and severe heart disease. This marks a potential world first in commercializing Nobel Prize-winning stem cell technology. The approval, based on small-scale clinical trials confirming safety and presumed efficacy, requires post-market verification within seven years.

Australiska forskare har rapporterat positiva resultat från en fas II klinisk prövning av ett nytt kolhydratbaserat läkemedel för behandling av sepsis. Prövningen, som involverade 180 patienter i Kina, visade läkemedlets förmåga att minska tillståndets svårighetsgrad. Denna utveckling ger hopp om den första riktade terapin mot en ledande dödsorsak globalt.

Rapporterad av AI

A 58-year-old fetal medicine consultant from Bengaluru has successfully donated her kidney to an unrelated woman in her 50s, following a legal battle that reached the Karnataka High Court. Thankam Subramonian, inspired by organ donation talks since 2014, overcame family concerns and institutional hurdles to become an altruistic donor. The court approved her request in November 2025, highlighting the rarity of such cases.

 

 

 

Denna webbplats använder cookies

Vi använder cookies för analys för att förbättra vår webbplats. Läs vår integritetspolicy för mer information.
Avböj