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on October 19, 2009

Circulation. 2009
Published online before print October 19, 2009, doi: 10.1161/CIRCULATIONAHA.108.840223
A more recent version of this article appeared on November 3, 2009
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Submitted on December 23, 2008
Accepted on August 19, 2009

Tobacco Smoke Exposure in Either the Donor or Recipient Before Transplantation Accelerates Cardiac Allograft Rejection, Vascular Inflammation, and Graft Loss

Ashwani K. Khanna PhD, Jianping Xu MD, PhD, Patricia A. Uber Pharm D, Allen P. Burke MD, Claudia Baquet MD, MPH, and Mandeep R. Mehra MBBS*

From the Tobacco Research Laboratory, Division of Cardiology, University of Maryland School of Medicine, Baltimore.

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: mmehra{at}medicine.umaryland.edu.

Background—Tobacco exposure in cardiac transplant recipients, before and after transplantation, may increase the risk of cardiac allograft vasculopathy and allograft loss, but no direct evidence for this phenomenon is forthcoming. In this experimental study, we investigated early consequences of tobacco smoke exposure in cardiac transplant donors and recipients with an emphasis on alloinflammatory mediators of graft outcome.

Methods and Results—Using heterotopic rat cardiac transplantation, we tested the effects of donor or recipient tobacco smoke exposure in 6 groups of animals (rat heterotopic cardiac transplantation) as follows: tobacco-naïve allogeneic rejecting controls (n=6), tobacco-naïve nonrejecting controls (n=3; killed on day 5 to simulate survival times of tobacco-treated animals), isografts (n=3), both donor and recipient rats exposed to tobacco smoke (n=4), only donor rats exposed to tobacco smoke (n=7), and only recipient rats exposed to tobacco smoke (n=6). Polymerase chain reaction studies of tissue and peripheral (systemic) protein expression were performed to evaluate inflammatory (tumor necrosis factor-{alpha}, interferon-{gamma}, interleukin-6) and alloimmune (interleukin-1 receptor 2, programmed cell death-1, and stromal cell-derived factor-1) pathways, as was histological analysis of the cardiac allografts. Our experiments reveal that pretransplantation tobacco exposure in donors and/or recipients results in heightened systemic inflammation and increased oxidative stress, reduces posttransplantation cardiac allograft survival by 33% to 57%, and increases intragraft inflammation (tumor necrosis factor-{alpha}, interferon-{gamma}, interleukin-6) and alloimmune activation (CD3, interleukin-1 receptor 2, programmed cell death-1, and stromal cell-derived factor-1) with consequent myocardial and vascular destruction.

Conclusions—These sentinel findings confirm that tobacco smoke exposure in either donors or recipients leads to accelerated allograft rejection, vascular inflammation, and graft loss. Molecular pathways that intersect as arbiters in this phenomenon include instigation of alloimmune activation associated with tobacco smoke–induced inflammation.


Key words: allograft • inflammation • rejection • surgery • tobacco • transplantation


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Clinical Summaries
Circulation 2009 120: 1743-1744. [Extract] [Full Text]