9/11/07

Researchers in Cincinnati and Louisville report that immunosuppressive risks associated with facial transplantation may be lower than thought, possibly making the procedure a safer option for people who have suffered severe facial injuries. The findings appear in the September edition of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery.

Previous data on the immunosuppression risks involved in facial transplantation were misleading, according to Rita Alloway, PharmD, and Steve Woodle, MD, of the University of Cincinnati (UC), and a University of Louisville team led by John Barker, MD, PhD.

The first recorded facial transplant was performed in France in 2005 on a 38-year-old woman whose nose, lips and chin had been bitten off by a dog. Tissues, muscles, arteries and veins were taken from a brain-dead donor and successfully transplanted to the patient’s lower face.

There have been only two similar attempts since.

In 2004, the British Royal College of Surgeons published a controversial report predicting a high incidence of immunological complications for facial transplants. This data became a benchmark for facial transplant teams and review boards and greatly influenced the facial transplantation debate.

According to Woodle, however, the report did not provide the best risk assessment.

"In estimating the risks of immunosuppression for face transplant recipients, the biggest problem is comparing apples to oranges," Woodle says. "What we have tried to do is to address the apples and oranges problem by a comprehensive and up-to-date consideration of the issue."

Both the health status of solid organ transplant recipients and the tissue composition of the solid organs reported in the earlier studies are very different from that of face transplant recipients and their facial tissues, he says.

In the current study, the Cincinnati and Louisville researchers compared the 2004 data with that taken from clinical studies describing kidney and hand transplants using the latest immunosuppression techniques.

They found the outcomes to be very different from those in the 2004 study.

Based on kidney and hand transplantation cases, in which the same drug regimen was used, researchers found that acute, or immediate, rejection may occur in 10% to 70% of patients. In of all these cases, however, rejection was reversible by adjusting the immunosuppression medications.

They also found that fewer than 10% of patients would experience chronic rejection over 5 years.

"In considering the most recent and relevant data, we came to the conclusion that the expectations for face transplant recipients should be significantly better than those previously published," Woodle says.

Coauthor Barker says that the lack of comparable "apples-to-apples" risk data in the field has led to debate over the ethics of face transplantation, which was the inspiration for the Cincinnati-Louisville study.

"This risk-benefit equation is at the center of controversy over facial transplantation," he says. "Physicians and scientists question whether the risks of life-long immunosuppression for patients justify the benefits of this new treatment."

Cincinnati coauthor Alloway says that physicians often don’t realize how much patients will endure to gain relief.

Researchers hope this study will provide a solid foundation for future work with facial transplantation.

"We’re trying to meld the fields of transplantation and immunosuppression to produce maximum expertise on the subject," Alloway continued. "We’re hoping to decrease toxicity and create a more manageable risk spectrum for surgeons and patients."

[www.medicalnewstoday.com, September 5, 2007]