Thymoglobulin and its use in renal transplantation: a review

Umasankar Mathuram Thiyagarajan, Amirthavarshini Ponnuswamy, Atul Bagul, Umasankar Mathuram Thiyagarajan, Amirthavarshini Ponnuswamy, Atul Bagul

Abstract

Thymoglobulin (Thymoglobulin®; Genzyme, Cambridge, Mass., USA) is a polyclonal antibody which has been used in the field of transplantation over the last four decades. With an initial hesitancy, it is widely used now in the prevention and treatment of rejection following renal transplantation. Thymoglobulin's lack of nephrotoxic properties (unlike calcineurin inhibitors) may potentiate it to be a very useful induction therapy during the early days following transplantation, particularly in a donation after circulatory death programme. More recently its role in conjunction with inhibitors of terminal complement activation has been shown to be beneficial in cross-match-positive transplantation. This review article consolidates up-to-date available evidence to address the therapeutic role of thymoglobulin in immunological tolerance, ischemia perfusion, live donor transplantation, delayed graft function, prevention and treatment of rejection, graft survival and post-transplant lymphoproliferative disorder following renal transplantation.

Copyright © 2013 S. Karger AG, Basel.

Source: PubMed

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