BACKGROUND: Incompatible live donor kidney transplantation is associated with an increased rate of antibody-mediated rejection (AMR) and subsequent transplant glomerulopathy. For patients with severe, oliguric AMR, graft loss is inevitable without timely intervention. METHODS: We reviewed our experience rescuing kidney allografts with this severe AMR phenotype by using splenectomy alone (n=14), eculizumab alone (n=5), or splenectomy plus eculizumab (n=5), in addition to plasmapheresis. RESULTS: The study population was 267 consecutive patients with donor-specific antibody undergoing desensitization. In the first 3 weeks after transplantation (median=6 days), 24 patients developed sudden onset oliguria and rapidly rising serum creatinine with marked rebound of donor-specific antibody, and a biopsy that showed features of AMR. At a median follow-up of 533 days, 4 of 14 splenectomy-alone patients experienced graft loss (median=320 days), compared to four of five eculizumab-alone patients with graft failure (median=95 days). No patients treated with splenectomy plus eculizumab experienced graft loss. There was more chronic glomerulopathy in the splenectomy-alone and eculizumab-alone groups at 1 year, whereas splenectomy plus eculizumab patients had almost no transplant glomerulopathy. CONCLUSION: These data suggest that for patients manifesting early severe AMR, splenectomy plus eculizumab may provide an effective intervention for rescuing and preserving allograft function.
BACKGROUND: Incompatible live donor kidney transplantation is associated with an increased rate of antibody-mediated rejection (AMR) and subsequent transplant glomerulopathy. For patients with severe, oliguric AMR, graft loss is inevitable without timely intervention. METHODS: We reviewed our experience rescuing kidney allografts with this severe AMR phenotype by using splenectomy alone (n=14), eculizumab alone (n=5), or splenectomy plus eculizumab (n=5), in addition to plasmapheresis. RESULTS: The study population was 267 consecutive patients with donor-specific antibody undergoing desensitization. In the first 3 weeks after transplantation (median=6 days), 24 patients developed sudden onset oliguria and rapidly rising serum creatinine with marked rebound of donor-specific antibody, and a biopsy that showed features of AMR. At a median follow-up of 533 days, 4 of 14 splenectomy-alone patients experienced graft loss (median=320 days), compared to four of five eculizumab-alone patients with graft failure (median=95 days). No patients treated with splenectomy plus eculizumab experienced graft loss. There was more chronic glomerulopathy in the splenectomy-alone and eculizumab-alone groups at 1 year, whereas splenectomy plus eculizumabpatients had almost no transplant glomerulopathy. CONCLUSION: These data suggest that for patients manifesting early severe AMR, splenectomy plus eculizumab may provide an effective intervention for rescuing and preserving allograft function.
Authors: Ek Khoon Tan; Andrew Bentall; Patrick G Dean; Mohammed F Shaheen; Mark D Stegall; Carrie A Schinstock Journal: Transplantation Date: 2019-11 Impact factor: 4.939
Authors: Michael S Mulvihill; Kannan P Samy; Qimeng A Gao; Robin Schmitz; Robert P Davis; Brian Ezekian; Francis Leopardi; Mingqing Song; Tam How; Kyha Williams; Andrew Barbas; Bradley Collins; Allan D Kirk Journal: Am J Transplant Date: 2019-04-12 Impact factor: 8.086
Authors: Carmen Lefaucheur; Denis Viglietti; Luis G Hidalgo; Lloyd E Ratner; Serena M Bagnasco; Ibrahim Batal; Olivier Aubert; Babak J Orandi; Federico Oppenheimer; Oriol Bestard; Paolo Rigotti; Anna V Reisaeter; Nassim Kamar; Yvon Lebranchu; Jean-Paul Duong Van Huyen; Patrick Bruneval; Denis Glotz; Christophe Legendre; Jean-Philippe Empana; Xavier Jouven; Dorry L Segev; Robert A Montgomery; Adriana Zeevi; Philip F Halloran; Alexandre Loupy Journal: J Am Soc Nephrol Date: 2017-10-17 Impact factor: 10.121