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Determination of the clinical relevance of donor epitope-specific HLA-antibodies in kidney transplantation.

Authors :
Kardol-Hoefnagel T
Senejohnny DM
Kamburova EG
Wisse BW
Reteig L
Gruijters ML
Joosten I
Allebes WA
van der Meer A
Hilbrands LB
Baas MC
Spierings E
Hack CE
van Reekum FE
van Zuilen AD
Verhaar MC
Bots ML
Drop ACAD
Plaisier L
Melchers RCA
Seelen MAJ
Sanders JS
Hepkema BG
Lambeck AJA
Bungener LB
Roozendaal C
Tilanus MGJ
Voorter CE
Wieten L
van Duijnhoven EM
Gelens MACJ
Christiaans MHL
van Ittersum FJ
Nurmohamed SA
Lardy NM
Swelsen W
van der Pant KAMI
van der Weerd NC
Ten Berge IJM
Hoitsma A
van der Boog PJM
de Fijter JW
Betjes MGH
Roelen DL
Claas FH
Bemelman FJ
Senev A
Naesens M
Heidt S
Otten HG
Source :
HLA [HLA] 2024 Jan; Vol. 103 (1), pp. e15346.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

In kidney transplantation, survival rates are still partly impaired due to the deleterious effects of donor specific HLA antibodies (DSA). However, not all luminex-defined DSA appear to be clinically relevant. Further analysis of DSA recognizing polymorphic amino acid configurations, called eplets or functional epitopes, might improve the discrimination between clinically relevant vs. irrelevant HLA antibodies. To evaluate which donor epitope-specific HLA antibodies (DESAs) are clinically important in kidney graft survival, relevant and irrelevant DESAs were discerned in a Dutch cohort of 4690 patients using Kaplan-Meier analysis and tested in a cox proportional hazard (CPH) model including nonimmunological variables. Pre-transplant DESAs were detected in 439 patients (9.4%). The presence of certain clinically relevant DESAs was significantly associated with increased risk on graft loss in deceased donor transplantations (pā€‰<ā€‰0.0001). The antibodies recognized six epitopes of HLA Class I, 3 of HLA-DR, and 1 of HLA-DQ, and most antibodies were directed to HLA-B (47%). Fifty-three patients (69.7%) had DESA against one donor epitope (range 1-5). Long-term graft survival rate in patients with clinically relevant DESA was 32%, rendering DESA a superior parameter to classical DSA (60%). In the CPH model, the hazard ratio (95% CI) of clinically relevant DESAs was 2.45 (1.84-3.25) in deceased donation, and 2.22 (1.25-3.95) in living donation. In conclusion, the developed model shows the deleterious effect of clinically relevant DESAs on graft outcome which outperformed traditional DSA-based risk analysis on antigen level.<br /> (© 2024 The Authors. HLA: Immune Response Genetics published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2059-2310
Volume :
103
Issue :
1
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
HLA
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
38239046
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/tan.15346