Serum dilutions as a predictive biomarker for peri-operative desensitization: An exploratory approach to transplanting sensitized heart candidates.
Publication/Presentation Date
6-1-2020
Abstract
Antibody-mediated rejection (AMR) of cardiac allografts mediated by anti-HLA Donor Specific Antibodies (DSA) is one of the major barriers to successful transplantation for the treatment of end-stage heart failure. Therapeutic plasma exchange (TPE) is a first-line treatment for pre-transplant desensitization. However, indications for treatment regimens and treatment end-points have not been well established. In this study, we investigated how sera dilutions could guide TPE regimens for effective peri-operative desensitization and early AMR treatment. Our data show that 1:16 dilutions of EDTA-treated sera and 1.5 volume TPE reduce anti-HLA class I and class II antibody levels in the same manner and, therefore, allows to predict which antibodies would respond to peri-operative TPE. We successfully applied this approach to transplanting three highly sensitized cardiac recipients (CPRA 85-93%) with peri-operative desensitization based on a virtual crossmatch performed on 1:16 diluted serum. Furthermore, we have used sera dilutions to guide DSA treatment post-transplant. Although these findings have to be confirmed in a larger prospective study, our data suggest that serum dilutions can serve as a predictive biomarker to guide peri-operative desensitization and post-transplant immunologic management.
Volume
60
First Page
101274
Last Page
101274
ISSN
1878-5492
Published In/Presented At
Timofeeva, O. A., Alvarez, R., Pelberg, J., Yoon, E., Alsammak, M., Geier, S. S., Ruggia-Check, C., Hassler, J., Hoosain, J., Brisco, M. A., Afari-Armah, N., Rakita, V., Brann, S., Keshavamurthy, S., Gomez-Abraham, J., Minakata, K., Toyoda, Y., & Hamad, E. (2020). Serum dilutions as a predictive biomarker for peri-operative desensitization: An exploratory approach to transplanting sensitized heart candidates. Transplant immunology, 60, 101274. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.trim.2020.101274
Disciplines
Medicine and Health Sciences
PubMedID
32142756
Department(s)
Department of Medicine, Cardiology Division
Document Type
Article