| Literature DB >> 26000231 |
R R Redfield1, D B Kaufman1, J S Odorico1.
Abstract
Despite significant improvement in pancreas allograft survival, rejection of the pancreas remains a major clinical problem. In addition to cellular rejection of the pancreas, antibody-mediated rejection of the pancreas is now a well-described entity. The 2011 Banff update established comprehensive guidelines for the diagnosis of acute and chronic AMR. The pancreas biopsy is critical in order to accurately diagnose and treat pancreas rejection. Other modes of monitoring pancreas rejection we feel are neither sensitive nor specific enough. In this review, we examine recent advances in the diagnosis and treatment of pancreas rejection as well as describe practical diagnostic and treatment algorithms.Entities:
Keywords: Diagnosis; Pancreas rejection; Treatment
Year: 2015 PMID: 26000231 PMCID: PMC4431702 DOI: 10.1007/s40472-015-0061-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Curr Transplant Rep
Pancreas allograft biopsies at the University of Wisconsin from January 1994 to July 2012
| Total | 422 |
| Percutaneous | 406 (96.2 %) |
| Rejection (of any kind) | 265 (62.8 %) |
| With normal amylase and lipase | 20 (7.5 %) |
| Pancreatitis | 16 (3.8 %) |
| Non-diagnostic | 24 (5.7 %) |
| Simultaneous pancreas and kidney biopsies | 20 |
| Discordant for rejection | 5 (25 %) |
Fig. 1Temporal relationship of elevated pancreas enzymes to etiology. Surgical complications typically present early in the postoperative course, whereas rejection most commonly presents later. “Other” includes possible causes such as transplant pancreatic duct stricture, native pancreatitis, IPMN or cancer in pancreas transplant or native pancreas, and penetrating ulcer. Of note, although complete graft thrombosis can present as increased pancreatic enzymes, in our experience, this is a very uncommon presentation, and when most grafts thrombose, very limited increases in enzymes are seen if at all. Relative probability on the Y-axis does not represent the overall probability or incidence of this complication; instead, it strives to convey the relative probability that these diagnoses are associated with elevated pancreatic enzymes. Abbreviations: ACR/AMR acute cellular rejection/antibody-mediated rejection, Ent/Pa Leak enteric or pancreatic leak, SBO small bowel obstruction
Common diagnoses contributing to increased pancreatic enzymes after pancreas transplantation
| Diagnosis | Overall frequency (%) | Frequency the entity presents as increased enzymes |
|---|---|---|
| Perioperative (<45 days) | ||
| Enzyme leak1 | ∼5 | High |
| Infected fluid/abscess | ∼5 | Moderate |
| Thrombosis | 2–5 | Low |
| Ileus | 5–10, transient | Moderate |
| Acute rejection | 1–2 | High |
| Mid postoperative (>45 days–1 year) | ||
| Acute rejectiona | 15–20 | High |
| SBO | 5 | Low–moderate |
| Pseudocyst | 2–5 | High |
| Constipation | 2–5 | Low–moderate |
| Abscess | 2–5 | Low–moderate |
| CMV pancreatitis | ∼1 | High |
| Late postoperative (>1 year) | ||
| Acute rejection | 5–10 | High |
| Chronic rejection | ∼5 | Moderate–high |
| SBO/ventral hernia | ∼10 | Low–moderate |
| Intrinsic pancreatic abnormalityb | ∼5 | Moderate–high |
| Native pancreatitis | 1 | High |
| CMV pancreatitis | <1 | High |
1Enzyme leak—enteric or parenchymal, including pseudocyst or pancreatic ascites
aFrequency depends on risk factors such as type of transplant, primary vs. re-transplant, sensitized status, donor-specific antibody, race mismatch, and donor age
bIncludes graft trauma, chemical pancreatitis, pancreatic duct stricture, IPMN, carcinoma, pseudocyst
Abbreviations: SBO small bowel obstruction, CMV cytomegalovirus
Fig. 2The University of Wisconsin Diagnosis and Treatment Algorithm Abbreviations: DSA donor-specific antibody, ACMR acute cell-mediated rejection, aAMR acute antibody-mediated rejection, cAMR chronic antibody-mediated rejection, ATG anti-thymocyte globulin, IVIg intravenous immunoglobulin, PP plasmapheresis. [(Published in Trends in Transplantation, © Permanyer Publications) 2].
Banff 2011 classification of cell- and antibody-mediated rejection of the pancreas
| 1. Acute T cell-mediated rejection |
| Grade I/mild acute T cell-mediated rejection—active septal inflammation (activated, blastic lymphocytes, and ±eosinophils) involving septal structures: venulitis (subendothelial accumulation of inflammatory cells and endothelial damage in septal veins, ductitis (epithelial inflammation and damage of ducts) |
| 2. Antibody-mediated rejection |
| (a) Confirmed circulating donor-specific antibody (DSA) |
| (b) Morphological evidence of tissue injury (interacinar inflammation/capillaritis, acinar cell damage, swelling/necrosis/apoptosis/dropout, vasculitis, thrombosis) |
| (c) C4d positivity in interacinar capillaries (IAC, ≥5 % of acinar lobular surface) |
| Acute AMR 3 of 3 diagnostic components |
| 3. Chronic allograft rejection/graft fibrosis |
| Stage I (mild graft fibrosis) |
| Histological grading of acute AMR |
| Grade I/mild acute AMR |
| Well-preserved architecture, mild monocytic-macrophagic or mixed (monocytic-macrophagic/neutrophilic) infiltrates with rare acinar cell damage |
| Grade II/moderate acute AMR |
| Overall preservation of the architecture with interacinar monocytic-macrophagic or mixed (monocytic-macrophagic/neutrophilic) infiltrates, capillary dilatation, capillaritis, congestion, multicellular acinar cell dropout, and extravasation of red blood cells |
| Grade III/severe acute AMR |
| Architectural disarray, scattered inflammatory infiltrates in a background of interstitial hemorrhage, multifocal and confluent parenchymal necrosis, arterial and venous wall necrosis, and thrombosis |
(With permission from: Drachenberg CB, Torrealba JR, Nankivell BJ, Rangel EB, Bajema IM, Kim DU, et al. Guidelines for the diagnosis of antibody-mediated rejection in pancreas allografts—updated Banff grading schema. American Journal of Transplantation. 2011;11 (9):1792–802)]]