| Literature DB >> 26760313 |
Rakesh Sindhi1, Chethan Ashokkumar1, Brandon W Higgs1, Samantha Levy2, Kyle Soltys1, Geoffrey Bond1, George Mazariegos1, Sarangarajan Ranganathan3, Adriana Zeevi3.
Abstract
The Pleximmune™ test (Plexision Inc., Pittsburgh, PA, USA) is the first cell-based test approved by the US FDA, which predicts acute cellular rejection in children with liver- or intestine transplantation. The test addresses an unmet need to improve management of immunosuppression, which incurs greater risks of opportunistic infections and Epstein-Barr virus-induced malignancy during childhood. High-dose immunosuppression and recurrent rejection after intestine transplantation also result in a 5-year graft loss rate of up to 50%. Such outcomes seem increasingly unacceptable because children can experience rejection-free survival with reduced immunosuppression. Pleximmune test sensitivity and specificity for predicting acute cellular rejection is 84% and 80% respectively in training set-validation set testing of 214 children. Among existing gold standards, the biopsy detects but cannot predict rejection. Anti-donor antibodies, which presage antibody-mediated injury, reflect late-stage allosensitization as a downstream effect of engagement between recipient and donor cells. Therefore, durable graft and patient outcomes also require accurate management of cellular immune responses in clinical practice.Entities:
Keywords: Acute cellular rejection; CD154; Liver transplantation; T-cytotoxic memory cells; cell-based assay; children; flow cytometry; index-based; intestine transplantation; prognostic; risk of rejection
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26760313 PMCID: PMC4965161 DOI: 10.1586/14737159.2016.1139455
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Expert Rev Mol Diagn ISSN: 1473-7159 Impact factor: 5.225