MSN Home  |  My MSN  |  Hotmail
Sign in to Windows Live ID Web Search:   
go to MSNGroups 
Free Forum Hosting
 
Important Announcement Important Announcement
The MSN Groups service will close in February 2009. You can move your group to Multiply, MSN’s partner for online groups. Learn More
Polycystic Kidney disease chat & community[email protected] 
  
What's New
  
  *Start Here*  
  PKD Foundation  
  PKD Outline  
  What Is PKD?  
  BOOKS ON PKD  
  PKD 101  
  Dictionary/Links  
  PKD Glossary  
  PKD Info links  
  ARPKD/children  
  Financial Help  
  Pharmaceutical help  
  Aneurysm Info  
  Organ Donation  
  Dialysis Info  
  Transplant info  
  NUTRITION  
  CHAT HOME  
  CHAT EUROPE  
  More Support  
  SHARING BOARDS  
  Members Area  
  Members Poetry  
  
  
  Tools  
 
General : milk to prevent rejection?
Choose another message board
 
     
Reply
(1 recommendation so far) Message 1 of 4 in Discussion 
From: spiderwoman  (Original Message)Sent: 12/6/2008 12:01 PM
(PhysOrg.com) -- Could Wisconsin's signature product �?milk �?hold the key to one of the biggest problems in organ transplantation?
<NOSCRIPT></NOSCRIPT>
Dr. Hans Sollinger, the surgeon who heads the transplant program at UW Hospital and Clinics, is betting on it.

Sollinger recently received FDA approval for a clinical trial testing whether the milk of genetically engineered cows can prevent the rejection of transplanted kidneys.

Each year, thousands of kidney transplants fail because of antibody-mediated rejection (AMR), a phenomenon in which a patient's immune system triggers the production of antibodies that in turn activate a protein called human C1. The protein attacks the transplanted kidney, a process that often leads to the body rejecting the organ

But C1 inhibitor may be able to disrupt the chain reaction that causes AMR. Cows can be genetically engineered to produce milk teeming with the inhibitor.

In the clinical trial, surgeons will identify patients with AMR following a kidney transplant. Half of the trial group will receive the current standard treatment - a blood-cleansing procedure called plasmapheresis - while the other half will receive both plasmapheresis and a course of recombinant C1 from cows' milk.

"A transplant typically rejects one of two ways - either by immune cells or by antibodies," explains Sollinger. "We can combat the immune-cell reaction with cyclosporin and other immunosuppressant agents. Where we are not good is combating antibodies. There's nothing we can do except for washing the antibodies out of the blood, but it's a very time-consuming and expensive process, and most of the time the effects are very short-lasting."

Sollinger's hopes for success are bolstered by medical precedent. Boosting the levels of human C1 inhibitor has been shown in clinical trials to combat a rare disease called hereditary angioedema, a condition in which antibodies trigger swelling and lesions of the skin and mucous membranes.

The trial builds on the work of Dr. Paul Terasaki, the famous transplant surgeon who championed the theory that antibodies, not immune cells, hold the key to preventing organ rejection.

"Dr. Terasaki showed us that in the long term, the grafts that are failing are failing because of antibodies," says Sollinger. "They're a huge problem, and now, for the first time, we have an agent to address it."

The trial is sponsored by and will be conducted in conjunction with Pharming, a European-based biotech company. Sollinger hopes to have results in as little as a year.

"That's why this trial is so exciting," he says. "This is not one of these drugs where we'll have to wait for years to see if it works. We'll know right away."

The transplant program at UW Hospital and Clinics is one of the world's foremost transplant programs, encompassing heart, lung, kidney, pancreas, intestine, islet cell and pediatric transplants. UW Health surgeons and physicians are recognized as experts and pioneers in new surgical techniques.

Provided by University of Wisconsin


First  Previous  2-4 of 4  Next  Last 
Reply
 Message 2 of 4 in Discussion 
From: BridgetSent: 12/7/2008 4:25 AM
Moo Juice.........it does a body good
 
 
who knew!

Reply
 Message 3 of 4 in Discussion 
From: MSN NicknamepkdLinSent: 12/7/2008 2:34 PM
Yeah, kind of gives a whole new meaning to "got milk?" Lin

Reply
 Message 4 of 4 in Discussion 
From: MSN NicknamesquirrelgrilSent: 12/7/2008 5:07 PM
I guess I don't understand what they are doing with the milk... do you have to drink this milk?

What about people who are lactose intolerant?

Pauline

First  Previous  2-4 of 4  Next  Last 
Return to General