| Literature DB >> 34046044 |
Carrie Schinstock1, Anat Tambur2, Mark Stegall1.
Abstract
Major advancements in the development of HLA antibody detection techniques and our understanding of the outcomes of solid organ transplant in the context of HLA antibody have occurred since the relevance of sensitization was first recognized nearly 50 years ago. Additionally, kidney paired donation programs (KPD) have become widespread, deceased donor allocation policies have changed, and several new therapeutic options have become available with promise to reduce HLA antibody. In this overview we aim to provide thoughtful guidance about when desensitization in kidney transplantation should be considered taking into account the outcomes of HLA incompatible transplantation. Novel therapeutics, desensitization endpoints, and strategies for future study will also be discussed. While most of our understanding about desensitization comes from studying kidney transplant candidates and recipients, many of the concepts discussed can be easily applied to desensitization in all of solid organ transplantation.Entities:
Keywords: antibody mediated rejection; crossmatch; desensitization; donor specific antibody (DSA); kidney paired donation; kidney transplantation; sensitization; single antigen bead assays (SAB)
Year: 2021 PMID: 34046044 PMCID: PMC8144637 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2021.686271
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
Figure 1Reduced transplantation rate among patients with cPRA > 99.9%. Multivariate fit of transplantation rate versus calculated panel reactive antibody (CPRA). A fit of transplant rate versus cPRA using a restricted cubic spline with 95% confidence interval controlling for time on the waitlist, age, gender, blood type, waitlist region, and ethnicity. The red line is univariate, while the blue line indicates the multivariate fit corresponding to a candidate with male gender, blood type A, waitlist region 5, Caucasian ethnicity, and waiting time of 2.5 y. Markers represent the observed transplant rate within each window of CPRA of width 0.01%. This prevalent cohort was active as of June 1, 2016, and followed for change in status through June 1, 2017. Used with permission. Schinstock et al. Managing highly sensitized renal transplant candidates in the era of kidney paired donation and the new kidney allocation system: Is there still a role for desensitization? Clinical transplantation. November 26, 2019 (19).
Kidney transplant candidates who may benefit from Desensitization.
| 1. All kidney transplant candidates with cPRA > 99.9%. These candidates have reduced transplantation rates on the deceased donor list and less likely to benefit from kidney paired donation. |
| 2. Kidney transplant candidates with cPRA > 98% and > 5 years of waiting time. These are candidates who have not benefited from their allocation priority. |
| 3. Kidney transplant candidates with an approved living donor and cPRA >98% but have not had a compatible offer through kidney paired donation. |
Desensitization therapies in kidney transplantation.
| Drug class | Name | Mechanism of Action | Previous and ongoing studies | Key Features |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Plasmapheresis | NA | Removal of circulating immunoglobulin | Stegall et al. ( | |
| Intravenous Immunoglobulin | NA | Exact mechanism unknown. Multiple Immunomodulatory mechanisms. | Glotz et al. ( | |
| Anti-CD 20 monoclonal antibodies | Rituximab | Depletes B cells | Jordan et al. ( | |
| Obinutuzumab | Redfield et al. ( | 3rd generation anti-CD20 dependent on ADCC. Used in for relapsed hematologic malignancies. | ||
| Proteosome inhibitors | Bortezomib | Accumulation of unwanted cellular protein and apoptosis. | Woodle et al. ( | Reversible proteasome inhibitor |
| Carfilzomib | Tremblay et al. ( | Irreversible proteasome inhibitor. Less neurotoxicity than bortezomib. | ||
| Ixazomib | Ongoing ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT03213158 | First oral proteasome inhibitor | ||
| Anti-CD38 monoclonal antibodies | Daratumumab | Depletes plasma cells | Kwun et al. ( | Studied in nonhuman primate model and was associated with increased in T cell mediated rejection. |
| Isatuximab | Ongoing ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT04294459 | |||
| Cysteine protease | Imlifidase | Cleaves heavy chains of human IgG (all subclasses) and eliminates IgG effector functions | Jordan et al. ( | Rebound of DSA at Day 7. Retreatment with imlifidase often ineffective because of the development of neutralizing antibodies. |
| Interleukin-6 Blockade | Tocilizumab | IL-6 receptor inhibitor | Vo et al. ( | |
| Complement inhibitors* | Eculizumab | Terminal complement blockade to protect against antibody mediated rejection. | Stegall et al. ( |
*Does not deplete antibody and therefore not a “desensitization” agent.
Figure 2Using titer to stratify patients with cPRA > 99.9%. This stratification was based on the first replicate from the baseline sample. The heat map shows the cPRA obtained from positive antibody specificities per titer for each of the 20 patients. The patients were ordered to show patients who would be the most likely to respond to desensitization (top) to least likely to respond to desensitization (bottom). For example, P2 continued to have a 100% cPRA when serum was diluted 1:4096, and thus it may be extremely difficult to remove enough antibodies to render this patient transplantable. Used with Permission. Tambur et al. Estimating Alloantibody levels in highly sensitized renal allograft candidates: Using serial dilutions to demonstrate a treatment effect in clinical trials. American Journal of Transplantation December 11, 2020 (55).
Figure 3Platform master protocol design. A platform master protocol allows for the study of multiple therapies for a single disease perpetually, and therapies can enter or leave the trial of the basis of predefined criteria. This master protocol is ideal for studying small heterogeneous populations.