Transplant Sci. 1994 Sep;4(1):61-79. Unique Identifier : AIDSLINE
PTLD may be considered as an opportunistic cancer in which the
immunodeficiency state of the host plays a key role in fostering the
environment necessary for abnormal lymphoproliferation. The following
discussion reflects our own current thoughts regarding events which may
result in PTLD and its sequelae. Many of the individual steps have not
been rigorously proved or disproved at this point in time. Following
transplantation and iatrogenic immunosuppression, the host:EBV
equilibrium is shifted in favor of the virus. Most seronegative patients
will become infected either via the graft or through natural means;
seropositive patients will begin to shed higher levels of virus and may
become secondarily superinfected via the graft. There is a grace period
of approximately one month posttransplant before increased viral
shedding begins. PTLD is almost never seen during this interval. In many
cases infection continues to be silent whereas in rare individuals there
is an overwhelming polyclonal proliferation of infected B lymphocytes.
This is the parallel of infectious mononucleosis occurring in patients
with a congenital defect in virus handling (X-linked lymphoproliferative
disorder). It is possible that transplant patients with this
presentation also suffer a defect in virus handling. In other cases
excessive iatrogenic immunosuppression may paralyze their ability to
respond to the infection. With CsA and FK506 regimens, individual tumors
may occur within a matter of months following transplant. The short time
of incubation suggests that these are less than fully developed
malignancies. It may be that local events conspire to allow outgrowth of
limited numbers of B-lymphocyte clones. A cytokine environment favoring
B-lymphocyte growth may be one factor and differential inhibition by the
immuno-suppressive drugs of calcium-dependent and -independent B-cell
stimulation may be another. In addition, there is some evidence that CsA
itself may inhibit apoptosis within B cells. Since most patients do not
develop PTLDs, an additional signal(s) for B-cell stimulation may be
required. Indeed, it is possible that the virus may simply serve to
lower the threshold for B-cell activation and/or provide a survival
advantage to these cells. The ability of individual cell clones to evade
a weakened immune system may set into play a Darwinian type of
competition in which the most rapidly proliferating cells with the least
number of antigenic targets predominate. In this regard, differences in
host HLA types may determine the repertoire of viral antigens which are
subject to attack.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
B-Lymphocytes/IMMUNOLOGY Herpesviridae
Infections/*COMPLICATIONS/IMMUNOLOGY *Herpesvirus 4, Human/IMMUNOLOGY
Human Immunosuppression/ADVERSE EFFECTS Infectious
Mononucleosis/*COMPLICATIONS/IMMUNOLOGY Lymphoproliferative
Disorders/*ETIOLOGY/GENETICS/IMMUNOLOGY/ MICROBIOLOGY Organ
Transplantation/*ADVERSE EFFECTS Support, Non-U.S. Gov't Support, U.S.
Gov't, P.H.S. Transplantation Immunology Tumor Virus
Infections/*COMPLICATIONS/IMMUNOLOGY JOURNAL ARTICLE REVIEW REVIEW,
TUTORIAL
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