| Literature DB >> 35243279 |
Elissa Bardhi1, Jennifer McDaniels1, Thomas Rousselle1, Daniel G Maluf1,2, Valeria R Mas1.
Abstract
Many risk factors and complications impact the success of liver transplantation, such as ischaemia-reperfusion injury, acute rejection, and primary graft dysfunction. Molecular biomarkers have the potential to accurately diagnose, predict, and monitor injury progression or organ failure. There is a critical opportunity for reliable and non-invasive biomarkers to reduce the organ shortage by enabling i) the assessment of donor organ quality, ii) the monitoring of short- and long-term graft function, and iii) the prediction of acute and chronic disease development. To date, no established molecular biomarkers have been used to guide clinical decision-making in transplantation. In this review, we outline the recent advances in cell-free nucleic acid biomarkers for monitoring graft injury in liver transplant recipients. Prior work in this area can be divided into two categories: biomarker discovery and validation studies. Circulating nucleic acids (CNAs) can be found in the extracellular environment pertaining to different biological fluids such as bile, blood, urine, and perfusate. CNAs that are packaged into extracellular vesicles may facilitate intercellular and interorgan communication. Thus, decoding their biological function, cellular origins and molecular composition is imperative for diagnosing causes of graft injury, guiding immunosuppression and improving overall patient survival. Herein, we discuss the most promising molecular biomarkers, their state of development, and the critical aspects of study design in biomarker research for early detection of post-transplant liver injury. Future advances in biomarker studies are expected to personalise post-transplant therapy, leading to improved patient care and outcomes.Entities:
Keywords: ACR, acute cellular rejection; CIT, cold ischaemia time; CNA(s), circulating nucleic acid; EV(s), extracellular vesicles; HCC, hepatocellular carcinoma; HLA, human leukocyte antigen; LFTs, liver function tests; LT, liver transplantation; RT-qPCR, reverse-transcription quantitative PCR; TCMR, T cell-mediated rejection; biomarkers; dd-cfDNA, donor-derived cell-free DNA; ddPCR, digital droplet PCR; donor-derived DNA; extracellular vesicles; liver transplantation; miRNA, microRNA; microRNAs; molecular diagnostics; personalized therapy; transcriptomics
Year: 2022 PMID: 35243279 PMCID: PMC8856989 DOI: 10.1016/j.jhepr.2022.100439
Source DB: PubMed Journal: JHEP Rep ISSN: 2589-5559
Fig. 1EVs released from graft tissue function as well-protected messenger complexes that allow for the transfer of lipids, proteins, and nucleic acids to neighbouring or distant targets.
By carrying biomolecules from tissues to biofluids, EVs may serve as non-invasive sources of clinical biomarkers. Characterising the cellular sources using surface markers can provide biological information about the functional state of liver-specific parent cells. dsDNA, donor-specific DNA; EV, extracellular vesicle; miRNA, microRNA.
miRNAs associated with various post-transplant liver conditions.[42], [43], [44], [45], [46], [47], [48], [49], [50], [51], [52], [53], [54], [55], [56], [57], [58], [59], [60], [61], [62], [63], [64], [65], [66], [67], [68], [69], [70], [71], [72], [73], [74], [75], [76], [77], [78], [79]
Current challenges associated with biomarker discovery research.
| Challenge | |
|---|---|
| Working with human samples | Recruitment: enrolling patients with diverse backgrounds from multiple transplant centres remains a challenge Small sample size: acquiring a large number of study participants is necessary for significant findings Clinical data organisation: collecting, storing, and sorting a significant volume of longitudinal patient data can be difficult to manage Study timeline: retention of patients during follow-up is costly, time-consuming, and difficult Variable post-transplant drug regimens: immunosuppressive treatment, dosage, and management may change over time, presenting a confounding variable that is difficult to adjust for |
| Study Design | Lack of standardised study endpoints: patient/graft survival, acute rejection episodes, biochemical data ( Lack of control group: post-transplant control groups are difficult to define Identification of best markers: there is no standardised method for narrowing down the top candidate markers when using high-throughput approaches |
| Technical challenges | Isolating nucleic acids: circulating nucleic acids are characterised by low concentration and high degradation rates Experimental methods: utilising high throughput technologies can be costly and time-consuming Normalisation methods: multiple approaches can be used to normalise cell-free nucleic acids |
| Building predictive models | Team science: biostatisticians are needed to aid in the development and implementation of statistical and mathematical methods Overfitting: over-testing the training data can result in a model that appears very accurate but has memorised the key points in the data set rather than learned how to generalise, requiring an independent dataset to validate findings. |
Biomarkers to assess graft injury after liver transplantation.
| Clinical trial title and identifier | Institution | Enrolment | Start date | End date | Description |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Serum Markers of Ischemia-Reperfusion Injury in Liver Transplant Patients [ | Vanderbilt University Medical Center | 20 | Mar 2008 | Feb 2010 | Observational trial of markers (TMAO, NGAL, cystatin-C, and allantoin) in the serum of patients who are undergoing LT surgery. |
| Gene Expression in Liver Allograft Rejection and Recurrent Hepatitis C [ | University of Pennsylvania | 275 | Aug 2011 | Jan 2013 | Observational study evaluating whether certain patterns of biomarkers in blood post-LT can be used to determine if the transplanted liver is being rejected or sustaining injury. |
| Pilot Study of Immunosuppression Drug Weaning in Liver Recipients Exhibiting Biomarkers of High Likelihood of Tolerance | Hospital Clinic of Barcelona | 25 | Sep 2011 | Jan 2013 | Non-randomised prospective study in which gradual weaning of immunosuppressive drugs will be offered to LT recipients exhibiting a favourable peripheral blood gene expression profile. |
| Discovery and Validation of Proteogenomic Biomarker Panels in Liver Transplant Recipients [ | Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine | 202 | Aug 2012 | Dec 2015 | The main focus of this study is to develop blood and/or urine tests that will help to detect early signs of rejection in LT patients. |
| The Relationship of Hepatobiliary microRNA Expression Profile and Clinical Outcome in Liver Transplantation [ | University of Edinburgh | 100 | Aug 2014 | Aug 2020 | Observational study correlating miRNA levels in bile duct biopsies taken during LT with the incidence of IC following LT. |
| Liver Immunosuppression Free Trial (LIFT) [ | King's College London | 148 | Oct 2015 | Oct 2021 | Prospective interventional study analysing the risk/benefit ratio of employing transcriptional biomarkers to guide immunosuppression withdrawal post-LT. |
| Plasmatic Factor V as a Predictor of Graft Dysfunction After Liver Transplantation [ | University Health Network, Toronto | 140 | Apr 2018 | Apr 2021 | Observational study validating the use of coagulation cofactor Factor V as a predictive biomarker of graft function after LT. |
| Enteric Microbiome and Liver Transplantation [ | IRCCS Ospedale San Raffaele | 275 | Sep 2018 | Aug 2021 | Observational study of the faecal microbiome of LT patients in combination with a large panel of clinical, lab and functional parameters correlated to different clinical outcomes. |
| Liquid Biopsy-based Monitoring System for Relapse of HCC After Liver Transplantation: A Multi-center and Prospective Study [ | Zhejiang University | 500 | Nov 2018 | Jul 2020 | Prospective study aiming to develop a liquid biopsy-based biomarker system for relapse of HCC tumour post-LT using genomic and proteomic information. |
| Monocytic Expression of HLA-DR After Liver Transplantation (EdMonHG) [ | Hospices Civils de Lyon | 100 | Feb 2020 | Sep 2023 | Observational study examining the expression of monocytic surface markers (HLA-DR) in blood and their association with post-LT immune dysfunction (acute cell rejection and sepsis). |
| Non-invasive Rapid Assessment of Patients with Liver Transplants Using Magnetic Resonance Imaging With LiverMultiScan. | Leiden University Medical Centre; King's College Hospital NHS Trust | 131 | Aug 2020 | Oct 2020 | Prospective biomarker trial comparing the accuracy of a new test (LiverMultiScan) against an existing test (liver biopsy) in the assessment of LT recipients. |
| Role of Fecal Microbiota in Predicting Graft Rejection and Sepsis Among Recipients of Living Donor Liver Transplant in First Year. [ | The Institute of Liver and Biliary Sciences | 100 | Nov 2020 | Oct 2022 | Observational study analysing the role of gut microflora an early biomarker for graft dysfunction and its influence on immune remodelling for the prediction of post-LT infection or rejection. |
| Molecular Assessment and Profiling of Liver Transplant Recipients [ | Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai | 1500 | May 2021 | Dec 2025 | Prospective observational study to assess the correlation between clinical events ( |
dd-cfDNA, deceased donor cell-free DNA; HCC, hepatocellular carcinoma; HLA, human leukocyte antigen; IC, ischaemic cholangiopathy; LT, liver transplantation; NGAL, neutrophil gelatinase-associated lipocalin; TMAO, trimethylamine N-oxide.