As recently as 40 years ago, organ
transplantation was still a distant dream. Since then it has been transformed into a major
branch of surgery and a valuable form of treatment.
One of the figures most responsible for this
transformation is Sir Roy Calne, Professor of Surgery at the University of Cambridge.
Calne began his research on organ transplantation in 1959 at the Royal Free Hospital, and
described the first effective immunosuppression for experimental kidney transplantation.
He developed this approach further while working as a Harkness Fellow at the Peter Bent
Brigham Hospital in Boston, Massachusetts, where it was applied to the treatment of
patients in 1962. In 1977, Calne developed the immunosuppressive agent cyclosporine A and
introduced it into clinical practice in 1978. This breakthrough is reflected in his highly
cited papers--most notably, a 1984 report discussing cyclosporine in renal
transplantation. (See R.M. Merion et al., "Cyclosporine: Five years experience in
cadaveric renal transplantation," New Engl. J. Med., 310[3]:148-54, 1984. This paper
has been cited nearly 300 times since its publication.)
In 1968 Calne performed the first liver
transplant in Europe; in 1987, the world's first liver, heart, and lung transplant; in
1992, the first intestinal transplant in the U.K.; and in 1994, the first successful
combined stomach, intestine, pancreas, liver, and kidney cluster transplant.
In addition to his duties at the University of
Cambridge, Calne is also an Honorary Consultant Surgeon at Addenbrooke's Hospital,
Cambridge, and is Immediate Past President of the Transplantation Society. Aside from his
research, he has other, wide-ranging interests. For example, he is an artist whose
paintings, depicting images of his clinical work, have been exhibited in many countries to
help promote awareness of transplantation. In 1994, adding to his roster of textbooks on
surgery and transplantation, he wrote a book entitled Too Many People, which warns of the
dangers of the continuing, rapid growth in the world's population.
Calne, 64, was educated at Lancing College and
received his medical training at Guy's Hospital, London. He was elected a Fellow of the
Royal Society in 1973, and was knighted in 1986.
Science
Watch's European correspondent,
Amir Amirani, met with Calne at his office in Cambridge.
Many of your most-cited papers have been concerned with
cyclosporine. What is the significance of this research?
Calne: The use of cyclosporine was a watershed
in transplantation. I have always felt that my own most interesting work was the
introduction of 6-mercaptopurine and Imuran as immunosuppressants in 1959 and 1960. But it
was only when Imuran was used together with steroids that it was possible to develop
clinical transplantation as a useful therapeutic option. We had to wait 20 years for
cyclosporine. The experimental work on cyclosporine with organ grafts in animals was done
in Cambridge in my department. We applied our findings in the clinic for the treatment of
patients with organ grafts. When cyclosporine was perceived as an important advance in
immunosuppression, the whole attitude of the medical profession towards transplantation
changed. Before that, it was regarded as an enterprise for mad surgeons ignorant of
immunology who really didn't know what they were doing and who obtained unpredictable
results. Subsequently, however, the image changed to that of an extremely valuable form of
treatment for a majority of patients--but not all. In the early 1980s there was an
important consensus meeting on liver transplantation held by the American National
Institutes of Health. It was decided that the procedure was no longer experimental and was
the preferred treatment for most forms of liver disease.
What is the current status of cyclosporine among the other immunosuppressants?
Calne: Cyclosporine is probably still the
pivotal drug of immunosuppression for all organ grafts, except perhaps intestinal grafts,
where FK506 seems to have better results. Everything that comes along has to be assessed
in relation to cyclosporine, and if a new drug is developed that is clearly much better,
cyclosporine will be displaced. But it has not been superseded so far and does not seem
likely to be in the immediate future.
Is there any discernible trend in the development of drugs in this area?
Calne: Cell biologists have been analyzing the
mode of action of cyclosporine. This has led to an unraveling of important intracellular
mechanisms of signal transduction, from the antigen appearing on the surface of a
lymphocyte to the signal for the lymphocyte to synthesize the powerful cytokine
interleukin-2, which causes the clonal proliferation of lymphocytes.
There has been intense activity searching for other molecules, and analogues
of cyclosporine. FK506, a macrolide with action similar to cyclosporine, has now been
registered, and rapamycin, which is chemically very similar to FK506 but has a different
action, is undergoing trials in the laboratory. There are a number of agents in phase II
trials. FK506 has recently been licensed for liver and kidney transplantation in the U.K.
Mycophenalate, the Syntex drug, which is a purine antagonist, seems to be superior to
azathioprine, and I believe the definitive phase III trial on this is soon to be
published.
So there is going to be a plethora of agents, which will make it extremely
difficult for the clinician to know what to do and how best to treat the patient. I think
we will need to train pharmacologists in immunosuppression--a special breed of
physician/clinical pharmacologists who will be expert in the use of these drugs in all
transplant patients.
Classic Papers by Sir Roy Calne
(Citations updated through June 1997) |
| Rank |
Paper |
Citations
through 12/94* |
Citations
through 6/97 |
| 1 |
R.Y. Calne, B.D. Pentlow, D.J.G. White,
D.B. Evans, P. McMaster, K. Rolles, D.C. Dunn, S. Thiru, G.N. Craddock, "Cyclosporin
A in patients receiving renal allografts from cadaver donors," The Lancet,
2:1323, 1978. |
623 |
682 |
| 2 |
R.Y. Calne, "The rejection
of renal homografts: Inhibition in dogs by 6-mercaptoprine," The Lancet,
1:417, 1960. |
174 |
182 |
| 3 |
R.Y. Calne, R. Williams, "Liver
transplantation in man. I. Observations on technique and organization in five cases,"
Brit. Med. J., 4:535, 1968 |
88 |
99 |
SOURCE: ISI's Science
Citation Index, 1960-June 1997
* citations reported with original interview |
|
You've said that the surgical problems of transplantation have essentially been
solved, and only immunological problems remain. Could you say what the next major
development in the field may be?
Calne: There is a reasonable consensus among
surgeons as to the techniques for transplanting a heart, lungs, kidney, and liver. It's
true: the immunology is still the main stumbling block. If I were to crystal-ball gaze, I
would predict that tolerance, or "almost tolerance," would be the next major
advance.
There are a number of different models to produce tolerance. They have in
common the use of extra donor material, particularly donor bone-marrow-derived cells, and
immunosuppression--hopefully for a short period of time--with the aim of manipulating the
immune system to be able to accept the graft without any continuous immunosuppression, or
with a minimal dose.
The classical Medawar-type tolerance is applicable only to the neonate or to
the unborn fetus, but nevertheless it demonstrated that it is possible to manipulate the
immune system--at least when it is not fully developed. The question arises, can we render
the immune system to a similar pliable state as in the neonate or the embryo? There have
been many different approaches to this pioneered by Dr. Anthony Monaco. The idea is to
give extra bone-marrow-derived cells and immunosuppression therapy for a short period of
time. Dr. David Sacks in Boston has been one of the most active and successful and has
produced what's called "mixed chimerism," in which the bone marrow becomes
populated with cells of both recipient and donor origin.
Dr. Thomas Starzl and his group in Pittsburgh have published a number of
papers on "microchimerism," in which donor-derived bone marrow cells are
scattered throughout the body, even in the skin of patients, many years after
transplantation. Microchimerism is prominent in the case of livers but also occurs with
other organs. Dr. Starzl believes that this microchimerism is the cause of graft
acceptance, but most of these patients are still on immunosuppression, so they are not
really tolerant. The Pittsburgh group is in the process of a very extensive trial using
large amounts of bone marrow from the donor along with a very high dosage of
immunosuppression at the time of organ transplantation. Tolerance has not yet been
reported in these patients.
What is the main focus of your research at the moment?
Calne: For about 25 years, we have been
intrigued by the fact that the liver can sometimes produce tolerance in animals without
any immunosuppression at all. The tolerance produced by the liver is interesting in that
the liver undergoes a rejection crisis and recovers spontaneously, and then the animal
will accept another organ from the same donor. From a whole variety of experiments, it
would seem that the liver induces tolerance by two mechanisms: 1) the bone-marrow-derived
cells in the liver, which include a special population of Kupffer cells, probably
establish themselves in the recipient and may be involved in some kind of immunological
engagement or conflict that leads to tolerance; and, 2) the liver produces something that
maintains tolerance--probably Class-I antigen. This is true in humans as well. In a
patient who has had a liver graft, about half of the Class-I antigen in the blood is from
the donor.
In man, if a liver is transplanted together with another organ, such as a
kidney, the kidney graft is protected from rejection. The longest survivor in the world
with a liver transplant (a patient of Dr. Starzl's), after 24 years, has had no
immunosuppression for 14 years.
The liver effect has been reproduced in many different laboratories. We have
been struggling with the obvious question: could we mimic the liver effect without having
to actually transplant the liver? Can we use, say, ground-up liver cells?
Our hypothesis, and we're not alone in this, is that there should be a chance
for a dynamic immunological engagement to occur between the host and graft--host against
graft and graft against host--without destruction of the graft. If we could only inhibit
aggressive T-cell activity for a period of time, we might establish tolerance. And the
period of time could be very critical, because if we miss that opportunity, we might then
be stuck with continuous high-dose immunosuppression as the only way of keeping an organ
in place.
We have done a number of experiments in which the strategy has been to leave
a window of opportunity--I call it "WOOFIE," for "Window of Opportunity For
Immunological Engagement." The experiments are simple, and the results are
straightforward. I do not know if the interpretations are correct, but the principle is
that we give one large dose of immunosuppression--we've been using a very large dose of
intravenous cyclosporine in the pig--and either donor spleen cells or donor blood. We then
leave a space of two or three days without any more immunosuppression, followed by six
more daily doses of immunosuppression. The model is a kidney graft between grossly
mismatched strains of pigs.
Control subjects reject renal allografts after seven to ten days if we don't
give any immunosuppression. If we give live spleen cells or fresh blood, three out of four
animals go on to long-term tolerance beyond a year without any rejection and no chronic
rejection. If the spleen cells were irradiated, there were no long-term survivors, so
living cells in the spleen would seem to be important. If we eliminated the window and
gave continuous immunosuppression, three out of four grafts were rejected. So this
proposed window of opportunity does seem to be important. Without any spleen cells there
was one long-term survivor out of four. So it's not an all-or-none thing, but the
phenomenon is fairly clear. We now have a protocol that could be used in the clinic,
although such a dose of cyclosporine would be too high to give to man. A modified protocol
would be needed with a gradual reduction to either minimal dosage or nil. That's our
hypothesis.
What's actually going on in this window of opportunity?
Calne: Imagine an analogy with a football
match: you want the match to take place and, at the end of it, for the two teams to shake
hands and be friends. Unfortunately, there'll be football hooligans who'll cause a great
deal of trouble and maybe destroy the match so it cannot take place. The initial dose of
immunosuppression would either kill or imprison the football hooligans, allow the match to
occur, and permit the shaking of hands--which is analogous to tolerance. The maintenance
of tolerance will also be precarious, because there will be recruitment of new hooligans,
or they'll be let out of jail, and that's the reason for giving another six doses although
in man you'd probably need to give it longer, I would think, because human beings are much
more complicated. They have alternate strategies of immunity. As to the exact molecular
mechanism involved in this window of opportunity: the short answer is that we don't know.
Some kind of contact between donor marrow-derived cells and those of the recipient seems
to be necessary in every kind of tolerance. We have experiments that work but we do not
know why they work. So that's my main research interest at the moment: to try and adapt
the experiments to a clinical protocol in patients.
Aside from the immunological problems, what about the issue of shortage of
organs?
Calne: No matter how much propaganda we have
and how ever much political pressure is put on people, there will not be enough organs
because the indications for transplantation are widening rather then contracting. So the
dream of a xenograft becomes more and more attractive.
One would have thought that a xenograft from a close relative such as a
nonhuman primate would be much better than a discordant species such as a pig, but the pig
is more acceptable on ethical grounds. Also, one can get pig organs of any size. However,
the history of xenografting in humans has been depressing.
The theoretical hurdle to be overcome first in a discordant graft is
complement activation, which causes an almost immediate graft destruction. David White in
my department is producing transgenic pigs with the anticomplementary human gene. I hope
that this approach will be successful in stopping complement activation. We will then be
in a position to see what the next barrier is.
There could be a whole variety of immunological obstacles and physiological
considerations. We do not know if xenograft rejection without complement can be controlled
with currently available drugs.
I think it would be facile to assume that there won't be important
physiological barriers, because every mammalian cell produces 1,000 or more proteins, and
every protein in the pig is different from the equivalent protein in man; some are only
slightly different, others are very dissimilar. These differences are likely to be
important at least in the long term, even if they are compensated for in the short term. I
don't think this has been appreciated fully. I would regard this as very interesting
science, but still a long way from practical application. Optimists say it's going to be
this year, but I believe that there is much difficult and painstaking work to be done
before we get near to using pig organs as a "piggy bank" for humans.