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Wednesday, November 28, 2012
Antibody-mediated vascular rejection of kidney allografts: a population-based study.
BACKGROUND: Rejection of allografts has always been the major obstacle to
transplantation success. We aimed to improve characterisation of different
kidney-allograft rejection phenotypes, identify how each one is associated with
anti-HLA antibodies, and investigate their distinct prognoses. METHODS: Patients
who underwent ABO-compatible kidney transplantations in Necker Hospital and
Saint-Louis Hospital (Paris, France) between Jan 1, 1998, and Dec 31, 2008, were
included in our population-based study. We assessed patients who provided biopsy
samples for acute allograft rejection, which was defined as the association of
deterioration in function and histopathological lesions. The main outcome was
kidney allograft loss-ie, return to dialysis. To investigate distinct rejection
patterns, we retrospectively assessed rejection episodes with review of graft
histology, C4d in allograft biopsies, and donor-specific anti-HLA antibodies.
FINDINGS: 2079 patients were included in the main analyses, of whom 302 (15%) had
acute biopsy-proven rejection. We identified four distinct patterns of kidney
allograft rejection: T cell-mediated vascular rejection (26 patients [9%]),
antibody-mediated vascular rejection (64 [21%]), T cell-mediated rejection
without vasculitis (139 [46%]), and antibody-mediated rejection without
vasculitis (73 [24%]). Risk of graft loss was 9·07 times (95 CI 3·62-19·7) higher
in antibody-mediated vascular rejection than in T cell-mediated rejection without
vasculitis (p<0·0001), compared with an increase of 2·93 times (1·1-7·9;
P=0·0237) in antibody-mediated rejection without vasculitis and no significant
rise in T cell-mediated vascular rejection (hazard ratio [HR] 1·5, 95% CI
0·33-7·6; p=0·60). INTERPRETATION: We have identified a type of kidney rejection
not presently included in classifications: antibody-mediated vascular rejection.
Recognition of this distinct phenotype could lead to the development of new
treatment strategies that could salvage many kidney allografts. FUNDING: None (read more)
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