Division of Nephrology and Hypertension, Department of Transplantation Medicine, New York Presbyterian Hospital-Weill Cornell Medical Center, New York, NY 10065, USA.
Transplantation. 2012 Sep 27;94(6):603-11. doi: 10.1097/TP.0b013e31825def05.
Identification of risk factors for renal allograft failure after an episode of acute antibody-mediated rejection (AMR) may help the outcome of this difficult-to-treat complication.
During December 2003 to February 2011, 833 kidney graft recipients underwent 1120 clinically indicated biopsies at our center. We reviewed the biopsy results and identified 87 biopsy specimens from 87 patients positive for the degradation product of complement component 4 (C4d) and acute AMR. We generated Kaplan-Meier survival curves and performed a multivariable analysis using the Cox proportional hazards regression model to identify risk factors for allograft failure after C4d+ acute AMR.
Among the 87 patients, 26 had a diagnosis of acute AMR according to the Banff '09 classification schema, 29 had acute AMR and chronic active AMR, 18 had acute AMR and acute T-cell mediated rejection (TCMR), and 14 had acute AMR, chronic active AMR, and acute TCMR. Kaplan-Meier survival estimates showed that concurrent acute TCMR (P=0.001, Mantel-Cox log-rank test), concurrent chronic active AMR (P=0.03), and time to biopsy (P=0.04) are associated with graft survival. The Cox proportional hazards regression analysis identified that concurrent acute TCMR (hazard ratio, 2.59 [95% confidence interval, 1.21-5.55]; P=0.01) and estimated glomerular filtration rate (hazard ratio, 0.65 [95% confidence interval, 0.48-0.88]; P=0.01) are independent risk factors for allograft loss. Concurrent chronic active AMR or time to biopsy was not associated with graft failure by the multivariable Cox analysis.
Our single-center study has elucidated that concurrent acute TCMR in kidney transplant recipients with C4d+ acute AMR is an independent risk factor for graft failure. Level of allograft function at the time of diagnosis was also an independent predictor of graft loss.
识别急性抗体介导排斥反应(AMR)后发生的肾移植失败的危险因素,可能有助于改善这种难以治疗的并发症的预后。
2003 年 12 月至 2011 年 2 月期间,我院 833 名肾移植受者进行了 1120 次临床指征的活检。我们回顾了活检结果,并确定了 87 名活检标本中存在补体成分 4(C4d)降解产物和急性 AMR 的患者。我们生成了 Kaplan-Meier 生存曲线,并使用 Cox 比例风险回归模型进行了多变量分析,以确定 C4d+急性 AMR 后移植失败的危险因素。
在这 87 名患者中,根据 Banff '09 分类方案,26 名患者诊断为急性 AMR,29 名患者诊断为急性 AMR 合并慢性活动性 AMR,18 名患者诊断为急性 AMR 合并急性 T 细胞介导排斥反应(TCMR),14 名患者诊断为急性 AMR、慢性活动性 AMR 和急性 TCMR。Kaplan-Meier 生存估计显示,同时发生急性 TCMR(P=0.001,Mantel-Cox 对数秩检验)、同时发生慢性活动性 AMR(P=0.03)和活检时间(P=0.04)与移植物存活相关。Cox 比例风险回归分析确定同时发生急性 TCMR(危险比,2.59[95%置信区间,1.21-5.55];P=0.01)和估计肾小球滤过率(危险比,0.65[95%置信区间,0.48-0.88];P=0.01)是移植物丢失的独立危险因素。多变量 Cox 分析表明,同时发生慢性活动性 AMR 或活检时间与移植物失败无关。
本单中心研究表明,在 C4d+急性 AMR 的肾移植受者中同时发生急性 TCMR 是移植失败的独立危险因素。移植时移植物功能水平也是移植物丢失的独立预测因子。