Extracorporeal photopheresis is a method of cell therapy that has demonstrated efficacy in autoimmune diseases, cutaneous T-cell lymphoma/Sézary syndrome and graft-versus-host disease after hematopoietic stem-cell transplantation. This technique has also been employed as a treatment strategy to induce tolerance after solid organ transplants. Treatment is based on the biological effect of ultraviolet A radiation and a photosensitizing drug, 8-methoxypsoralen, on mononuclear cells collected by apheresis and reinfused into the patient. The suggested mechanism of action is related to the induction of anticlonotypic immunity directed against pathogenic clones of T lymphocytes. Treatment induces apoptosis of pathogenic T-cells, and it appears that activation of antigen-presenting cells has an important role in this process.
Photopheresis; graft-versus-host disease; psoralens; cutaneous lymphoma