Use of complement binding assays to assess the efficacy of antibody mediated rejection therapy and prediction of graft survival in kidney transplantation |
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Authors: | Daniel S. Ramon Yihung Huang Lili Zhao TrisAnn Rendulic Jeong M. Park Randall S. Sung Milagros Samaniego |
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Affiliation: | 1. Department of Pathology, University of Michigan School of Medicine, Ann Arbor, MI, USA;2. Department of Internal Medicine, Division of Nephrology, University of Michigan School of Medicine, Ann Arbor, MI, USA;3. Department of Biostatistics, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI, USA;4. Department of Pharmacy Services, University of Michigan School of Medicine, Ann Arbor, MI, USA;5. Department of Surgery, University of Michigan School of Medicine, Ann Arbor, MI, USA |
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Abstract: | BackgroundThe Luminex® single antigen bead assay (SAB) is the method of choice for monitoring the treatment for antibody-mediated rejection (AMR). A ?50% reduction of the dominant donor-specific antibody (IgG-DSA) mean fluorescence intensity (MFI) has been associated with improved kidney allograft survival, and C1q-fixing DSA activity is associated with poor outcomes in patients with AMR. We aimed to investigate if C1q-DSA can be used as a reliable predictor of response to therapy and allograft survival in patients with biopsy-proven AMR.MethodsWe tested pre- and post-treatment sera of 30 kidney transplant patients receiving plasmapheresis and low-dose IVIG for biopsy-proven AMR. IgG-DSA and C1q-DSA MFI were measured and correlated with graft loss or survival. Patients were classified as nonresponders (NR) when treatment resulted in <50% reduction in MFI of IgG-DSA and/or C1q-DSA was detectable following therapy.ResultsDifferences in the percentage of patients deemed NR depended upon the end-point criterion (73% by reduction in IgG-DSA MFI vs. 50% by persistent C1q-DSA activity). None of the seven patients with <50% reduction of IgG-DSA but non-detectable C1q-DSA-fixing activity after therapy experienced graft loss, suggesting that C1q-DSA activity may better correlate with response. Reduction of C1q-DSA activity predicted graft survival better than IgG-DSA in the univariate Cox analysis (20.1% vs. 5.9% in NR; log-rank P-value = 0.0147).ConclusionsA rapid reduction of DSA concentration below the threshold required for complement activation is associated with better graft survival, and C1q-DSA is a better predictor of outcomes than IgG-DSA MFI reduction. |
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Keywords: | AMR antibody-mediated rejection DSA donor-specific antibody HEL high expression loci IVIG intravenous immunoglobulin LEL low expression loci MFI mean fluorescent intensity NR nonresponders R responders SAB Corresponding author at: Histocompatibility, Immunogenetics and Disease Profiling Laboratory, Stanford University, 3373 Hillview Avenue, Palo Alto, CA 94304, USA |
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