| Literature DB >> 29935060 |
Carrie A Schinstock1, Ruth Sapir-Pichhadze2, Maarten Naesens3,4, Ibrahim Batal5, Serena Bagnasco6, Laurine Bow7, Patricia Campbell8, Marian C Clahsen-van Groningen9, Matthew Cooper10, Emanuele Cozzi11, Darshana Dadhania12, Fritz Diekmann13, Klemens Budde14, Fritz Lower15, Babak J Orandi16, Ajda T Rowshani17, Lynn Cornell18, Edward Kraus19.
Abstract
The aim of this study was to determine how the Banff antibody-mediated rejection (ABMR) classification for kidney transplantation is interpreted in practice and affects therapy. The Banff Antibody-Mediated Injury Workgroup electronically surveyed clinicians and pathologists worldwide regarding diagnosis and treatment for 6 case-based scenarios. The participants' (95 clinicians and 72 renal pathologists) assigned diagnoses were compared to the Banff intended diagnoses (reference standard). The assigned diagnoses and reference standard differed by 26.1% (SD 28.1%) for pathologists and 34.5% (SD 23.3%) for clinicians. The greatest discordance between the reference standard and clinicians' diagnosis was when histologic features of ABMR were present but donor-specific antibody was undetected (49.4% [43/87]). For pathologists, the greatest discordance was in the case of acute/active ABMR C4d staining negative in a positive crossmatch transplant recipient (33.8% [23/68]). Treatment approaches were heterogeneous but linked to the assigned diagnosis. When acute/active ABMR was diagnosed by the clinician, treatment was recommended 95.3% (SD 18.4%) of the time vs only 77.7% (SD 39.2%) of the time when chronic active ABMR was diagnosed (P < .0001). In conclusion, the Banff ABMR classification is vulnerable to misinterpretation, which potentially has patient management implications. Continued efforts are needed to improve the understanding and standardized application of ABMR classification in the transplant community.Entities:
Keywords: classification systems: Banff classification; clinical decision making; clinical research/practice; kidney transplantation/nephrology; rejection: antibody-mediated (ABMR)
Year: 2018 PMID: 29935060 PMCID: PMC6309659 DOI: 10.1111/ajt.14979
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am J Transplant ISSN: 1600-6135 Impact factor: 8.086