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Review
. 1998 Mar;50(1):59-87.

Therapeutic inhibition of the complement system

Affiliations
  • PMID: 9549758
Review

Therapeutic inhibition of the complement system

S C Makrides. Pharmacol Rev. 1998 Mar.

Abstract

The use of powerful methodologies in molecular biology, biochemistry, and physiology in the last 2 decades had led to impressive progress in our understanding of the mechanisms of complement activation and its role as either a protective or a pathogenic factor in human disease. With respect to disease pathogenesis, the complexity of the complement cascade provides opportunities for several different therapeutic targets within the complement pathways. More than a century after complement was first described, we are about to witness in the near future the availability of a variety of complement inhibitors for specific therapies. Progress in the area of xenotransplantation has been substantial, but formidable obstacles remain to selective inhibition of the factors that block successful clinical xenotransplantation. Bispecific antibodies, designed to enhance rather than inhibit existing complement pathways, hold strong promise for the clearance of viral and bacterial pathogens from the circulation.

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