Long-term outcomes of kidney transplantation in patients with high levels of preformed DSA: the Necker high-risk transplant program

L Amrouche, O Aubert, C Suberbielle, M Rabant… - …, 2017 - journals.lww.com
L Amrouche, O Aubert, C Suberbielle, M Rabant, JPD Van Huyen, F Martinez…
Transplantation, 2017journals.lww.com
Background There is an increasing number of anti-HLA sensitized and highly sensitized
renal transplant candidates on waiting lists, and the presence of donor-specific
alloantibodies (DSAs) at the time of transplantation leads to acute and chronic antibody-
mediated rejection (AMR). Acceptable short-term outcomes have been described, notably
because of desensitization protocols, but mid-and long-term data are still required. Methods
Our high immunologic risk program included 95 patients with high peak or day 0 DSA levels …
Background There is an increasing number of anti-HLA sensitized and highly sensitized renal transplant candidates on waiting lists, and the presence of donor-specific alloantibodies (DSAs) at the time of transplantation leads to acute and chronic antibody-mediated rejection (AMR). Acceptable short-term outcomes have been described, notably because of desensitization protocols, but mid-and long-term data are still required.
Methods Our high immunologic risk program included 95 patients with high peak or day 0 DSA levels (mean fluorescence intensity [MFI]> 3000) with a complement-dependent cytotoxicity-negative crossmatch, who received a posttransplant desensitization protocol starting at day 0 with high-dose intravenous immunoglobulin, plasma exchanges, and eventually rituximab. Their characteristics were compared with a control group including 39 patients with a lower immunologic risk (MFI between 500 and 3000 at day 0) who received the same posttransplant desensitization.
Results The median MFI of the immunodominant class I or II DSA in the peak or day 0 serum was 9421 (interquartile range, 4959-12 610). An AMR occurred during the first posttransplant year in 31 patients (32.6%), and at one year, the rate of chronic AMR was 39.5%. The 1-, 3-, 5-and 7-year death-censored allograft survival rates were 98%, 91%, 86%, and 78%, respectively, with concomitant recipient survival rates of 97%, 93%, 85%, and 79%, respectively.
Conclusions These results suggest that DSA-sensitized patients with high MFI levels can receive transplantation across the HLA-barrier, with the use of an intensified posttransplant immunosuppressive therapy starting at day 0 combined with close clinical, immunologic, and histologic monitoring.
Lippincott Williams & Wilkins