Sirolimus as a new drug to treat RIF patients with elevated Th17/Treg ratio: A double-blind, phase II randomized clinical trial
Sirolimus as a new drug to treat RIF patients with elevated Th17/Treg ratio: A double-blind, phase II randomized clinical trial
نویسندگان: مجید احمدی , سمانه عبدالمحمدی وحید , مهناز غائبی , صنم دولتی , ساناز عباسپور اقدم , شهلا دانایی , زهره بابالو , محمد نوری , مهدی یوسفی
کلمات کلیدی: Recurrent implantation failure
Sirolimus
Th17/Treg axis
نشریه: 55231 , 2019 , 74 , 2019
| نویسنده ثبت کننده مقاله |
مهدی یوسفی |
| مرحله جاری مقاله |
تایید نهایی |
| دانشکده/مرکز مربوطه |
مرکز سلولهای بنیادی |
| کد مقاله |
67875 |
| عنوان فارسی مقاله |
Sirolimus as a new drug to treat RIF patients with elevated Th17/Treg ratio: A double-blind, phase II randomized clinical trial |
| عنوان لاتین مقاله |
Sirolimus as a new drug to treat RIF patients with elevated Th17/Treg ratio: A double-blind, phase II randomized clinical trial |
| ناشر |
13 |
| آیا مقاله از طرح تحقیقاتی و یا منتورشیپ استخراج شده است؟ |
خیر |
| عنوان نشریه (خارج از لیست فوق) |
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| نوع مقاله |
Original Article |
| نحوه ایندکس شدن مقاله |
ایندکس شده سطح یک – ISI - Web of Science |
| آدرس لینک مقاله/ همایش در شبکه اینترنت |
|
| Background: RIF is clinically defined as the failure of good quality embryos to implant into the uterus following
at least three cycles of In Vitro Fertilization/Embryo Transfer (IVF/ET). During human pregnancy, a genetically
different fetus is allowed to survive within the uterus despite the maternal recognition of fetal alloantigens.
Compared with normal pregnant women, early loss of embryo is associated with systemic lower levels of Treg
cells in IVF. Moreover, several lines of evidence have indicated that differentiation of naive T cells into Th17 is
deleterious for normal pregnancy and may cause implantation failure. Sirolimus as the most common mTOR
(mammalian target of Rapamycin) inhibitor is able to effectively prevent allograft rejection. Here we aimed to
evaluate Sirolimus effects on Th17/Treg axis and subsequently on pregnancy outcome.
Methods and materials: 121 patients with a history of at least 3 implatation failures were selected and enrolled in
this clinical trial. Blood was drawn between days 5 and 10 of the cycle prior to the index IVF/ET cycle to assess
baseline value of Th17 cells and regulatory T cells ratios using flowcytometry. A Th17/Treg cell ratio equal
or>0.74 was considered to be the elevated Th17/Treg cell ratio. In 76 patients with elevated Th17/Treg ratios,
43 individuals were treated with Sirolimus and 33 remained untreated.
Results: Our results demonstrated that Sirolimus treatment led to an increase in Treg cells number and function
in treated group and reduced the frequency and function of Th17 cells. Moreover Th17/Treg cell ratio, significantly
reduced from 1.18 ± 0.46% to 0.9 ± 0.45% following Sirolimus intervention (P=0.024). In contrast,
no significant difference in Th17 and Treg cell frequencies and Th17/Treg cell ratio was observed in
untreated control subjects before and after ET. Finally our data showed a significantly higher clinical pregnancy
rate (55.81%) in Sirolimus-treated patients compared with control group (24.24%) (P < 0.0005). We also found
a significantly increased live birth rate (48.83%) in RIF women who received Sirolimus compared with control
group (21.21%) (P < 0.0001).
Conclusion: The findings of the current study revealed the fact that Sirolimus exhibit potent immunosuppressive
effects by blocking intracellular immune responses downstream of co-stimulatory signals, also is able to improve
reproductive outcome in RIF women with imbalanced Th17/Treg ratio by modulate of Th17 /Treg axis, thus
representing a new approach for the potential treatment of patients with embryo implantation failure. |
| نام فایل |
تاریخ درج فایل |
اندازه فایل |
دانلود |
| Sirolimus as .pdf | 1398/04/21 | 1366536 | دانلود |