| Literature DB >> 34062714 |
Vishal Jaikaransingh1, Pradeep V Kadambi1.
Abstract
Monitoring kidney transplant recipients for evidence of allograft rejection is essential to lower the risk of graft loss. The traditional method relies on serial checks in serum creatinine with a biopsy of the allograft if dysfunction is suspected. This is invasive, labor-intensive and costly. As such, there is widespread interest in the use of biomarkers to provide a noninvasive approach to detecting allograft rejection. One such biomarker is donor-derived cell-free DNA (ddcf-DNA). Here, we review the methodology for the determination of the amount/fraction of ddcf-DNA, evaluate the available data of its use in kidney transplantation and render an opinion in the clinical decision-making of these patients.Entities:
Keywords: antibody-mediated rejection; cell-free DNA; donor-derived cell-free DNA; kidney transplantation
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34062714 PMCID: PMC8147225 DOI: 10.3390/medicina57050436
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Medicina (Kaunas) ISSN: 1010-660X Impact factor: 2.430
Studies assessing ddcf-DNA in plasma for the diagnosis of acute rejection using commercially available assays.
| Study | Methodology | Number of Patients | Threshold (% dd-cfDNA) | Sen/Sepc | PPV/NPV |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bloom et al. [ | NGS (AlloSure) | 102P/107B | 1% | 59/85–Any Rejection | 61/84–Any Rejection |
| Sigdel et al. [ | NGS (Prospera) | 217B | 1% | 88.7/72.6–Any Rejection | 52/95–Any Rejection |
| Huang et al. [ | NGS (AlloSure) | 63P | 0.74% | 79/72–Any Rejection | 77/75–Any Rejection |
| Mehta et al. [ | NGS (AlloSure) | 11P/11B | 1% | NR | NR |
| Puliyanda et al. [ | NGS (AlloSure) | 67P/28B | 1% | 86/100–Any Rejection | NR |
B—number of biopsies; NR—not reported; P—number of patients.