| Literature DB >> 29075627 |
Antoine Roux1,2,3, Ines Bendib Le Lan1, Sonia Holifanjaniaina4, Kimberly A Thomas2, Clément Picard1, Dominique Grenet1, Sandra De Miranda1, Benoit Douvry1, Laurence Beaumont-Azuar1, Edouard Sage3,5, Jérôme Devaquet6, Elise Cuquemelle7, Morgan Le Guen8, Caroline Suberbielle9, Chantal Gautreau9, Marc Stern1, Maura Rossetti2, Abdul Monem Hamid1, Francois Parquin6.
Abstract
Although donor-specific anti-human leukocyte antigen (HLA) antibodies (DSAs) are frequently found in recipients after lung transplantation (LT), the characteristics of DSA which influence antibody-mediated rejection (AMR) in LT are not fully defined. We retrospectively analyzed 206 consecutive LT patients of our center (2010-2013). DSAs were detected by using luminex single antigen beads assay and mean fluorescence intensity was assessed. Within the study population, 105 patients had positive DSA. Patients with and without AMR (AMRPos, n = 22, and AMRNeg, n = 83, respectively) were compared. AMRPos patients had significantly greater frequencies of anti-HLA DQ DSA (DQ DSA) than AMRNeg patients (95 vs 58%, respectively, p < 0.0001). Compared to AMRNeg patients, AMRPos patients had higher DQ DSA sum MFI [7,332 (2,067-10,213) vs 681 (0-1,887), p < 0.0001]. DQ DSA when associated with AMR, had more frequent graft loss and chronic lung allograft dysfunction (CLAD). These data suggest (i) that DSA characteristics clearly differ between AMRPos and AMRNeg patients and (ii) the deleterious impact of DQ DSA on clinical outcome.Entities:
Keywords: HLA; antibody mediated rejection; clinical outcome; donor-specific antibodies; lung transplant
Year: 2017 PMID: 29075627 PMCID: PMC5641623 DOI: 10.3389/fmed.2017.00155
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Med (Lausanne) ISSN: 2296-858X
Criteria for antibody-mediated rejection-donor-specific antibody status categorization.
| Antibody-mediated rejection (AMR) patients (DSAposAMRpos) | Non-AMR patients | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| AMRneg (DSAposAMRneg) | DSALim | DSAneg | ||
| Donor-specific antibody (DSA) positivity [DSA mean fluorescence intensity (MFI) > 1,000, or MFI = 500–1,000 with more than two specificities, and/or detected more than once] | DSA positivity (DSA MFI > 1,000, or MFI = 500–1,000 with more than two specificities, and/or detected more than once) | DSA detected only once and having only one specificity with an MFI = 500–1,000 | All single antigen tests with DSA MFI < 500 | |
| Clinical dysfunction and DSA positivity and C4d positive staining with or without histological patterns suggestive of AMR | Clinical dysfunction and DSA positivity and negative C4d staining with histological patterns suggestive of AMR: neutrophil capillaritis | |||
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Figure 1Flow chart and analysis summary.
Baseline clinical characteristics.
| AMRPos patients | AMRNeg patients | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Recipient age, median (IQR 25-75) | 35.45 (23.65–53.25) | 36.30 (27.7–51.3) | 0.78 |
| Underlying disease (CF/PF/COPD/other), | 10/5/4/3 | 45/15/15/8 | 0.86 |
| Recipient female, | 11 (50) | 44 (53) | 0.45 |
| LAS, median (IQR 25-75) | 36.85 (33.2–42.1) | 38 (35.1–43.7) | 0.44 |
| HLA mismatch, mean (SD) | 6.9 (0.7) | 5.9 (1.2) | <0.001 |
| PreLT DSA, | 12 (54) | 58 (69) | 0.2 |
| Induction therapy, | 12 (54) | 52 (62.3) | 0.62 |
Categorical variables were compared by Fisher’s exact test. Quantitative variables were compared by Mann–Whitney test. HLA mismatching was defined as the number of donor HLA antigens among loci A, B, DRB1, DQB1 differing from recipient antigens (4 loci × 2 alleles each = maximum of 8 mismatches).
CF, cystic fibrosis; COPD, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease; LAS, lung allocation score; PF, pulmonary fibrosis.
Figure 2Mean fluorescence intensity (MFI) of immunodominant donor-specific antibody (DSA) at peak according to antibody-mediated rejection (AMR) status. Peak was defined as the time point of DSA with the highest sum MFI for AMRNeg (DSAPosAMRNeg) patients, or as the time of AMR diagnosis for AMRPos patients. (A) Each patient’s immunodominant DSA is a circle. Circles inside broken line ellipse (n = 7) represent patients with AMR despite an immunodominant DSA MFI < 5,000, whose characteristics are detailed in panel (C) (Mann–Whitney test). (B) ROC curve for use of immunodominant DSA MFI as a predictor of AMR diagnosis, and the specificity/sensitivity according to different MFI cut-offs. (C) Characteristics of the 7 AMRPos patients with immunodominant DSA MFI < 5,000. Significance values are denoted above lines over compared groups.
Figure 3Sum mean fluorescence intensity (MFI) of donor specific antibody (DSA) at peak according to antibody-mediated rejection (AMR) status. Peak was defined as the time point of DSA with the highest sum MFI for AMRNeg (DSAPosAMRNeg) patients, or as the time of AMR diagnosis for AMRPos patients. (A) The sum MFI of each patient’s DSA is indicated by each circle. The table below lists the number of patients, median and mean sum MFI, and number of specificities for each patient group. (B) ROC curve for use of sum MFI as a predictor of AMR diagnosis and the specificity/sensitivity according to MFI different cutoffs. Significance values are denoted above lines over compared groups.
Figure 4DQ mean fluorescence intensity (MFI) of donor specific antibody (DSA) at peak according to antibody-mediated rejection (AMR) status. Peak was defined as the time point of DSA with the highest sum MFI for AMRNeg (DSAPosAMRNeg) patients, or as the time of AMR diagnosis for AMRPos patients. (A) Frequency and number of patients with DQ DSA at the peak. (B) Frequency and number of patients with immunodominant DQ DSA at the peak. (C) Each patient’s DQ DSA MFI are represented as a circle. Comparison of number of patients, as well as median and mean DQ DSA MFI, for AMRPos and AMRNeg patients is in the table below. (D) ROC curve for use of DQ DSA MFI as a predictor of AMR diagnosis and the specificity/sensitivity according to different MFI cutoffs. Groups were compared using Chi-square (A,B) and Mann–Whitney tests (C) and significance values are denoted above lines over compared groups.
Figure 5Clinical outcome associated with anti-HLA DQ donor-specific antibody (DQ DSA). Patients were categorized as DQ DSA if they had at least once DSA directed against one DQ antigen. Patients were categorized as non DQ DSA if they had DSA but never directed against DQ antigen. (A) Graft survival conditioned by 3-month survival compared between DSA negative, non-DQ DSA and DQ DSA patients. Global comparison was statistically significant, but non-DQ DSA and DQ DSA comparison did not reach significance. (B) CLAD occurrence between DSA negative, non-DQ DSA, and DQ DSA patients. Again, global comparison was statistically significant, but non-DQ DSA and DQ DSA comparison did not reach significance. (C) Graft survival conditioned by 3-month survival compared between non DQ DSA AMRneg, DQ DSA AMRneg, and DQ DSA AMRpos patients. The only non-DQ DSA AMRpos patient was exclude of the analysis. Both global and DQ DSA AMRneg and DQ DSA AMRpos comparison were highly significant.