| Literature DB >> 27862968 |
P Bruneval1, A Angelini2, D Miller3, L Potena4, A Loupy5, A Zeevi6, E F Reed7, D Dragun8, N Reinsmoen9, R N Smith10, L West11, S Tebutt12, T Thum13, M Haas14, M Mengel15, P Revelo3, M Fedrigo2, J P Duong Van Huyen5, G J Berry16.
Abstract
The 13th Banff Conference on Allograft Pathology was held in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada from October 5 to 10, 2015. The cardiac session was devoted to current diagnostic issues in heart transplantation with a focus on antibody-mediated rejection (AMR) and small vessel arteriopathy. Specific topics included the strengths and limitations of the current rejection grading system, the central role of microvascular injury in AMR and approaches to semiquantitative assessment of histopathologic and immunophenotypic indicators, the role of AMR in the development of cardiac allograft vasculopathy, the important role of serologic antibody detection in the management of transplant recipients, and the potential application of new molecular approaches to the elucidation of the pathophysiology of AMR and potential for improving the current diagnostic system. Herein we summarize the key points from the presentations, the comprehensive, open and wide-ranging multidisciplinary discussion that was generated, and considerations for future endeavors.Entities:
Keywords: clinical research/practice; heart transplantation/cardiology; rejection; rejection: antibody-mediated (ABMR); rejection: subclinical; translational research/science
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27862968 PMCID: PMC5363364 DOI: 10.1111/ajt.14112
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am J Transplant ISSN: 1600-6135 Impact factor: 8.086
Key questions to address in the setting of heart transplant diagnostics identified by the panel
| Microcirculation inflammation |
Definition and multicenter assessment of MI grading system: Reproducibility—exportability, association with CAV, and outcome. Multicenter studies on MI phenotyping to assess the heterogeneity of MI and its relationship with ACR |
| Chronic antibody‐associated allograft damage |
Assessment of the influence of persisting AMR on the cardiac vasculature from the epicardial arteries to the interstitial capillaries Systematically evaluate myocardial capillary density after repeated AMR episodes Ultrastructural studies to evaluate structural capillary changes after repeated AMR episodes Develop uniform terminology for describing the arterial lesions comprising CAV |
| Antibody detection in cardiac AMR |
Connect antibodies to pathology in multicenter large‐scale studies Address anti‐HLA and non‐anti‐HLA‐Ab clinical relevance Assess Ab properties with injury phenotypes, CAV, and outcomes |
| Molecular approaches in heart TX |
Molecular phenotype of AMR Connect antibodies and pAMR ISHLT categories with gene signatures in EMB Molecular phenotype of ACR |
Ab, antibody; ACR, acute cellular rejection; AMR, antibody‐mediated rejection; CAV, cardiac allograft vasculopathy; ISHLT, The International Society for Heart & Lung Transplantation; MI, microvascular injury; pAMR, pathologic antibody‐mediated rejection; TX, transplant.
Figure 1Main histopathologic and immunophenotypic features of cardiac on endomyocardial biopsies. (A) Intravascular accumulation of intravascular mononuclear cells within the myocardial capillaries. H&E stain; original ×20. (B) Diffuse hypercellularity within the myocardium resulting in a “busy pattern” at low magnification. H&E stain; original ×10. (C) Histopathology cannot clearly differentiate the cell types accumulating in intravascular location (arrow). They are referred to as intravascular activated mononuclear cells. H&E stain; original ×40. (D) Diffuse labeling of capillaries with C4d antibody by immunohistochemistry. Formalin‐fixed paraffin‐embedded biopsy; original ×40. (E) Diffuse labeling of capillaries with C4d antibody by immunofluorescence. Frozen tissue; original ×40. (F) Many intravascular CD68‐positive macrophages. Formalin‐fixed paraffin‐embedded biopsy; original ×40. AMR, antibody‐mediated rejection.
Prospects for implementing HLA Ab detection into the AMR classification in cardiac transplantation: outstanding question identified and potential recommendations made by the Ab expert panel
| Questions | Recommendations | Definitions |
|---|---|---|
| What is the optimum timing of DSA testing posttransplantation? | Stratify the patients based on risk for AMR and monitor:
High and intermediate risk with each biopsy early posttransplant, 3, 6, 9, 12 months first year and yearly if no clinical indication. Low‐risk minimum 3, 6, 12 months, yearly after and anytime clinically indicated |
High risk: presence of DSA at the time of transplant Intermediate risk: presence of DSA in historical samples Low risk: no DSA detected |
| When DSA should be treated? |
Increased level (titer and MFI) of persistent DSA should be biopsied to rule out subclinical rejection. Strong correlation of persistent DSA with graft dysfunction |
Level DSA levels assessed by MFI strength and/or titration of sera Persistent DSA: presence of DSA in serial samples Transient DSA: Presence of DSA only in one sample |
| Should DSA testing be performed with diagnosis of pAMR ? |
Testing for DSA presence and level (HLA and non‐HLA) should be performed to:
correlate with severity of pAMR assess efficacy of treatment |
Ab, antibody; AMR, antibody‐mediated rejection; DSA, donor‐specific antibodies; MFI, mean fluorescence intensity.
Prospects for implementing HLA‐Ab detection into the AMR classification in cardiac transplantation: limitations and potential solutions
| Problem | Interpretation | Resolution |
|---|---|---|
| HLA‐Ab to denatured antigens | False positive results: HLA‐Ab to cryptic epitopes, clinically irrelevant | Repeat testing after acid treatment of SAB; surrogate crossmatch |
| Intrinsic and extrinsic factors inhibiting the SAB assay | False low MFI or negative results: due to inhibition of SAB assay | Dilution of sera pretesting, adsorption, inhibition of C1q, addition of EDTA, heat treatment to remove and uncover the real reactivity |
| Low MFI on SAB resulting in higher reactivity using cellular targets | False low MFI: DSA to a shared target present on multiple beads | Adequate analysis of specific DSA epitope |
| Using MFI to evaluate level and strength of DSA for risk stratification | Low or high MFI level of DSA may not correlate with risk of AMR, or response to treatment following antibody removal therapies | Modified SAB assay to distinguish between complement and noncomplement binding DSA and determining titer of DSA (serial dilutions of patient sera) |
Ab, antibody; AMR, antibody‐mediated rejection; DSA, donor‐specific antibodies; EDTA, ethylenediamine tetraacetic acid; MFI, mean fluorescence intensity; SAB, single‐antigen bead.