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Disease Areas of Focus

Solid Organ Transplant Rejection

On any given day, more than 86,000 people in the United States are waiting to receive a donor organ.1 Patients fortunate to receive a transplanted organ still face a number of medical challenges, the biggest of which is usually organ rejection.

A transplant recipient must be on a regimen of drugs designed to prevent the host immune system from rejecting the new organ. Unfortunately, many anti-rejection drugs have significant cardiovascular and renal toxicities. Thus, while these drugs decrease the risk of rejection, they sometimes contribute to long-term cardiovascular complications by causing increases in blood pressure, elevations in cholesterol, and development of diabetes as well as reduced kidney function.

Bristol-Myers Squibb is currently testing an investigational compound that may avoid or reduce some of the problems associated with current therapies.

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1. HHS/HRSA/HSB/DOT. 2005 OPTN/SRTR Annual Report 1995-2004.
The data and analyses reported in the 2005 Annual Report of the U.S. Organ Procurement and Transplantation Network and the Scientific Registry of Transplant Recipients have been supplied by UNOS and URREA under contract with HHS. The authors alone are responsible for reporting and interpreting these data; the views expressed herein are those of the authors and not necessarily those of the U.S. Government.




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