Literature DB >> 23265908

Predicting acute cardiac rejection from donor heart and pre-transplant recipient blood gene expression.

Zsuzsanna Hollander1, Virginia Chen, Keerat Sidhu, David Lin, Raymond T Ng, Robert Balshaw, Gabriela V Cohen-Freue, Andrew Ignaszewski, Carol Imai, Annemarie Kaan, Scott J Tebbutt, Janet E Wilson-McManus, Robert W McMaster, Paul A Keown, Bruce M McManus.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Acute rejection in cardiac transplant patients remains a contributory factor to limited survival of implanted hearts. Currently, there are no biomarkers in clinical use that can predict, at the time of transplantation, the likelihood of post-transplant acute cellular rejection. Such a development would be of great value in personalizing immunosuppressive treatment.
METHODS: Recipient age, donor age, cold ischemic time, warm ischemic time, panel-reactive antibody, gender mismatch, blood type mismatch and human leukocyte antigens (HLA-A, -B and -DR) mismatch between recipients and donors were tested in 53 heart transplant patients for their power to predict post-transplant acute cellular rejection. Donor transplant biopsy and recipient pre-transplant blood were also examined for the presence of genomic biomarkers in 7 rejection and 11 non-rejection patients, using non-targeted data mining techniques.
RESULTS: The biomarker based on the 8 clinical variables had an area under the receiver operating characteristic curve (AUC) of 0.53. The pre-transplant recipient blood gene-based panel did not yield better performance, but the donor heart tissue gene-based panel had an AUC = 0.78. A combination of 25 probe sets from the transplant donor biopsy and 18 probe sets from the pre-transplant recipient whole blood had an AUC = 0.90. Biologic pathways implicated include VEGF- and EGFR-signaling, and MAPK.
CONCLUSIONS: Based on this study, the best predictive biomarker panel contains genes from recipient whole blood and donor myocardial tissue. This panel provides clinically relevant prediction power and, if validated, may personalize immunosuppressive treatment and rejection monitoring.
Copyright © 2013 International Society for Heart and Lung Transplantation. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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Year:  2012        PMID: 23265908     DOI: 10.1016/j.healun.2012.11.008

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Heart Lung Transplant        ISSN: 1053-2498            Impact factor:   10.247


  3 in total

Review 1.  Molecular Diagnostic Testing in Cardiac Transplantation.

Authors:  Kiran Khush; Shirin Zarafshar
Journal:  Curr Cardiol Rep       Date:  2017-10-13       Impact factor: 2.931

2.  Association of Serum MiR-142-3p and MiR-101-3p Levels with Acute Cellular Rejection after Heart Transplantation.

Authors:  Ihdina Sukma Dewi; Zsuzsanna Hollander; Karen K Lam; Janet-Wilson McManus; Scott J Tebbutt; Raymond T Ng; Paul A Keown; Robert W McMaster; Bruce M McManus; Olof Gidlöf; Jenny Öhman
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2017-01-26       Impact factor: 3.240

3.  Influence of proliferation signal inhibitors on vascular endothelial growth factor production in heart transplant recipients - preliminary report.

Authors:  Natalia Kamieńska; Michał Zakliczyński; Alicja Kasperska-Zając; Marta Szewczyk; Dominika Trybunia-Orzeszek; Jerzy Nożyński; Marta Pijet; Tomasz Hrapkowicz; Marian Zembala
Journal:  Kardiochir Torakochirurgia Pol       Date:  2014-06-29
  3 in total

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