| Literature DB >> 22690325 |
Francisco Salcido-Ochoa1, Nurhashikin Yusof, Susan Swee-Shan Hue, Doreen Haase, Terence Kee, Olaf Rotzschke.
Abstract
The existence of T-cell subsets naturally committed to perform immunoregulation has led to enthusiastic efforts to investigate their role in the immunopathogenesis of transplantation. Being able to modulate alloresponses, regulatory T cells could be used as an immunodiagnostic tool in clinical kidney transplantation. Thus, the measurement of Foxp3 transcripts, the presence of regulatory T cells in kidney biopsies, and the phenotypic characterisation of the T-cell infiltrate could aid in the diagnosis of rejection and the immune monitoring and prediction of outcomes in kidney transplantation. Interestingly, the adoptive transfer of regulatory T cells in animal models has been proven to downmodulate powerful alloresponses, igniting translational research on their potential use as an immunomodulatory therapy. For busy transplant clinicians, the vast amount of information in the literature on regulatory T cells can be overwhelming. This paper aims to highlight the most applicable research findings on the use of regulatory T cells in the immune diagnosis and potential immunomodulatory therapy of kidney transplant patients. However, can we yet rely on differential regulatory T-cell profiles for the identification of rejection or to tailor patient's immunosuppression? Are we ready to administer regulatory T cells as inductive or adjunctive therapy for kidney transplantation?Entities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22690325 PMCID: PMC3368592 DOI: 10.1155/2012/397952
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Transplant ISSN: 2090-0007
Studies supporting the association of regulatory T cells with diagnosis of kidney rejection and graft outcomes prediction.
| Reference | Study design | Patient characteristics | Immunodiagnostic findings | Graft outcomes | Conclusions/additional comments |
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| Muthukumar et al. [ | Prospective | 83 total pts (36 pts with graft dysfunction and BPAR) | Increased Foxp3 transcripts in urinary cells in pts with BPAR | Better kidney function and lower risk of graft failure in pts with BPAR and higher levels of Foxp3 transcripts | Demonstration of potential role of the measurement of Foxp3 transcripts for diagnosis of rejection and outcomes prediction |
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| Wang et al. [ | Prospective | 10 living-donor transplant pts with BPAR | Increased Foxp3 transcripts in peripheral blood associated with BPAR | Measurement of Foxp3 transcripts in peripheral blood may aid the immunodiagnosis of rejection in living-donor transplantation/sample size too small to be conclusive, but findings are encouraging | |
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| Martin et al. [ | Retrospective | 11 of 17 pts with acute BPAR | Patients with Foxp3+ infiltrates had better kidney function and lower rates of graft loss at 1-year posttransplantation | Tregs infiltration in graft might correlate with favourable graft outcomes/sample size too small to be conclusive and some patients who lost their graft had evidence of humoral rejection | |
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| Aquino-Dias et al. [ | Prospective | 35 pts with DGF (total 48 biopsies: 20 with BPAR and 28 with ATN) | Increased Foxp3 transcripts in kidney tissue, peripheral blood and urinary cells correlated with BPAR when compared to ATN | Measurement of Foxp3 transcripts may aid the early identification of rejection for pts with DGF | |
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| Grimbert et al. [ | Cross-sectional | 26 pts with kidney dysfunction (15 pts with borderline rejection and 11 with type IA acute TCMR) | Higher ratios for the transcripts of Foxp3/granzyme B were found in pts with borderline rejection in comparision with pts with type IA acute TCMR | Tregs could play a protective role ameliorating inflammation and preventing the progression to frank rejection | |
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| Mansour et al. [ | Retrospective | 46 pts with borderline rejection | Increased Foxp3 transcripts in pts with stable creatinine compared to pts who progressed to BPAR | No difference found in kidney function at 2 years in both pts with treated BPAR and pts with stable creatinine | Measurement of Foxp3 transcripts may have prognostic value in borderline rejection |
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| Bestard et al. [ | Retrospective | 37 pts with SCR from 170 protocol biopsies | Fewer Tregs were observed in pts on ciclosporin | The presence of Treg infiltrates correlated with better graft function at 2- and 3-years posttransplantation | Presence of Tregs infiltration could prevent the progression from SCR to clinical rejection |
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| Bestard et al. [ | Retrospective | 37 pts with SCR | Number of infiltrating Tregs in pts with SCR correlated with Foxp3 demethylation at the Treg-specific demethylation region | The presence of Treg infiltrates correlated with better graft function and survival up to 5-year posttransplantation | Presence of Tregs infiltration in rejection associates with better graft outcomes/the Banff classification alone is insufficient for immunodiagnosis and prognostication purposes |
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| Xu et al. [ | Retrospective | 125 pts with protocol biopsies with presence of T cell infiltrates (14 with SCR, 32 with borderline rejection, 79 with no rejection) | Higher ratios for the transcripts of Foxp3/granzyme B correlated with lower risk for rejection | Higher ratios for the transcripts of Foxp3/granzyme B predicted better kidney function and graft survival up to 5-year posttransplantation | Tregs could play a protective role reducing rejection risk and improving graft outcomes/unable to provide conclusions for pts without T cell infiltrates |
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| Zuber et al. [ | Retrospective | 67 pts (34 with acute TCMR, 33 with chronic TCMR) | Higher number and ratio of Tregs over total T cells were observed in patients with chronic rejection than with acute rejection | The greater the Treg infiltrate in inflamed scarred areas, the better the graft survival | Tregs might be protective in chronic rejection |
ATN: acute tubular necrosis; BPAR: biopsy proven acute rejection; DGF: delayed graft function; pts: patients; SCR: subclinical rejection; TCMR: T-cell-mediated rejection. Blank area: not assessed.
Studies with conflicting results regarding the association of regulatory T cells with kidney rejection and graft outcomes prediction.
| Reference | Study design | Patient characteristics | Immunodiagnostic findings | Graft outcomes | Conclusions/additional comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bunnag et al. [ | Retrospective | 77 pts (42 with BPAR) | Higher levels of Foxp3 transcripts associated with acute TCMR and AMR in the univariate but not in the multivariate analysis | No relationship was found between Foxp3 expression and graft outcomes. Only C4d positivity and inflammation biomarkers related to outcomes in their multivariate analysis | Foxp3 expression accompanies the inflammatory process rather than being a marker of alloimmunity |
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| Veronese et al. [ | Retrospective | 73 pts (59 with BPAR) | High expression of Foxp3 was associated with acute TCMR but not with AMR | 2-year graft survival was worse in pts with BPAR and higher Fopx3 expression | No prognostic value was given to the analysis of Foxp3 expression in patients with BPAR/differentiation of authentic Tregs from recently activated Foxp3+ T cells could have been useful to understand their results |
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| Taflin et al. [ | Retrospective | 24 biopsies with graft dysfunction (12 with BPAR and 12 with borderline rejection) and 16 protocol biopsies at 1-year posttransplantation | Treg infiltrates were higher in borderline rejection and SCR compared to patients with acute TCMR | Tregs may have a beneficial role against overt rejection. The authors questioned the diagnostic value of Treg identification for the diagnosis of rejection | |
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| Batsford et al. [ | Retrospective | 32 biopsies taken on 23 pts (16 biopsies with BPAR) | No relation of Foxp3+ Tregs detection with acute rejection | No prognostic value of the measurement of Tregs at one-year posttransplantation | Measurement of Tregs has no diagnostic nor prognostic value/only Banff type 1 acute TCMR was included, and biopsies with higher grades of rejection and likely larger infiltrates were excluded, which likely biased their results |
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| Kollins et al. [ | Prospective | 55 pts (29 protocol biopsies with no rejection, and 26 indication biopsies with BPAR) | No association between numbers of infiltrating Tregs and diagnosis of rejection | No correlation between Treg infiltrates and kidney function at 1- and 2-year posttransplantation | Measurement of Tregs has no diagnostic nor prognostic value/in the protocol biopsy group, biopsies devoid of significant inflammatory infiltrate and those with infiltrate not diagnostic of acute rejection were excluded, which likely biased their results |
AMR: antibody-mediated rejection; BPAR: biopsy proven acute rejection; pts: patients; TCMR: T-cell-mediated rejection. Blank area: not assessed.