Back to Search Start Over

Preformed T cell alloimmunity and HLA eplet mismatch to guide immunosuppression minimization with tacrolimus monotherapy in kidney transplantation: Results of the CELLIMIN trial

Authors :
Gilles Blancho
Maria Meneghini
Magali Giral
Edoardo Melilli
Juan Irure
Martina Koch
Miriam C. Banas
Elena Crespo
Raphaël Duivenvoorden
Cécile Braudeau
Anett Sefrin
Kathryn J. Wood
Friedrich Thaiss
Oriol Bestard
Bernhard Banas
Petra Hruba
Petra Reinke
Frederike J. Bemelman
Björn Nashan
Sophie Brouard
Nils Lachmann
Natalie M Otto
Alberto Sanchez-Fueyo
Maik Stein
Liu Hu
Lucia Stranavova
Ondrej Viklicky
H.-D. Volk
Josep M. Grinyó
Gantuja Bold
Sophia Christakoudi
Juan Carlos Ruiz
Nephrology
AII - Inflammatory diseases
APH - Aging & Later Life
Source :
American Journal of Transplantation, 21, 8, pp. 2833-2845, American journal of transplantation, 21(8), 2833-2845. Wiley-Blackwell, American Journal of Transplantation, 21, 2833-2845
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2021.

Abstract

Item does not contain fulltext Personalizing immunosuppression is a major objective in transplantation. Transplant recipients are heterogeneous regarding their immunological memory and primary alloimmune susceptibility. This biomarker-guided trial investigated whether in low immunological-risk kidney transplants without pretransplant DSA and donor-specific T cells assessed by a standardized IFN-γ ELISPOT, low immunosuppression (LI) with tacrolimus monotherapy would be non-inferior regarding 6-month BPAR than tacrolimus-based standard of care (SOC). Due to low recruitment rates, the trial was terminated when 167 patients were enrolled. ELISPOT negatives (E-) were randomized to LI (n = 48) or SOC (n = 53), E+ received the same SOC. Six- and 12-month BPAR rates were higher among LI than SOC/E- (4/35 [13%] vs. 1/43 [2%], p = .15 and 12/48 [25%] vs. 6/53 [11.3%], p = .073, respectively). E+ patients showed similarly high BPAR rates than LI at 6 and 12 months (12/55 [22%] and 13/66 [20%], respectively). These differences were stronger in per-protocol analyses. Post-hoc analysis revealed that poor class-II eplet matching, especially DQ, discriminated E- patients, notably E-/LI, developing BPAR (4/28 [14%] low risk vs. 8/20 [40%] high risk, p = .043). Eplet mismatch also predicted anti-class-I (p = .05) and anti-DQ (p < .001) de novo DSA. Adverse events were similar, but E-/LI developed fewer viral infections, particularly polyoma-virus-associated nephropathy (p = .021). Preformed T cell alloreactivity and HLA eplet mismatch assessment may refine current baseline immune-risk stratification and guide immunosuppression decision-making in kidney transplantation.

Details

ISSN :
16006135
Volume :
21
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
American Journal of Transplantation
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....c53c30fcd0add1fd19ca939b98c1d20f