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- Alexandre Loupy, Carmen Lefaucheur, Dewi Vernerey, Christof Prugger, Jean-Paul Duong van Huyen, Nuala Mooney, Caroline Suberbielle, Véronique Frémeaux-Bacchi, Arnaud Méjean, François Desgrandchamps, Dany Anglicheau, Dominique Nochy, Dominique Charron, Jean-Philippe Empana, Michel Delahousse, Christophe Legendre, Denis Glotz, Gary S Hill, Adriana Zeevi, and Xavier Jouven.
- Paris Translational Research Center for Organ Transplantation, INSERM Unité 970, Department of Kidney Transplantation, Hôpital Necker, Université Paris Descartes, and Assistance Publique-Hôpitaux de Paris (AP-HP), Paris, France. alexandreloupy@gmail.com
- N. Engl. J. Med.. 2013 Sep 26;369(13):1215-26.
BackgroundAnti-HLA antibodies hamper successful transplantation, and activation of the complement cascade is involved in antibody-mediated rejection. We investigated whether the complement-binding capacity of anti-HLA antibodies plays a role in kidney-allograft failure.MethodsWe enrolled patients who received kidney allografts at two transplantation centers in Paris between January 1, 2005, and January 1, 2011, in a population-based study. Patients were screened for the presence of circulating donor-specific anti-HLA antibodies and their complement-binding capacity. Graft injury phenotype and the time to kidney-allograft loss were assessed.ResultsThe primary analysis included 1016 patients. Patients with complement-binding donor-specific anti-HLA antibodies after transplantation had the lowest 5-year rate of graft survival (54%), as compared with patients with non-complement-binding donor-specific anti-HLA antibodies (93%) and patients without donor-specific anti-HLA antibodies (94%) (P<0.001 for both comparisons). The presence of complement-binding donor-specific anti-HLA antibodies after transplantation was associated with a risk of graft loss that was more than quadrupled (hazard ratio, 4.78; 95% confidence interval [CI], 2.69 to 8.49) when adjusted for clinical, functional, histologic, and immunologic factors. These antibodies were also associated with an increased rate of antibody-mediated rejection, a more severe graft injury phenotype with more extensive microvascular inflammation, and increased deposition of complement fraction C4d within graft capillaries. Adding complement-binding donor-specific anti-HLA antibodies to a traditional risk model improved the stratification of patients at risk for graft failure (continuous net reclassification improvement, 0.75; 95% CI, 0.54 to 0.97).ConclusionsAssessment of the complement-binding capacity of donor-specific anti-HLA antibodies appears to be useful in identifying patients at high risk for kidney-allograft loss.
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