» Articles » PMID: 17389735

Hemodialysis Vintage, Black Ethnicity, and Pretransplantation Antidonor Cellular Immunity in Kidney Transplant Recipients

Overview
Specialty Nephrology
Date 2007 Mar 29
PMID 17389735
Citations 19
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Prolonged exposure to dialysis before transplantation and black ethnicity are known risk factors for acute rejection and graft loss in kidney transplant recipients. Because the strength of the primed antidonor T cell repertoire before transplantation also is associated with rejection and graft dysfunction, this study sought to determine whether hemodialysis (HD) vintage and/or black ethnicity affected donor-directed T cell immunity. An enzyme-linked immunosorbent spot (ELISPOT) assay was used to measure the frequency of peripheral T cells that expressed IFN-gamma in response to donor stimulator cells before transplantation in 100 kidney recipients. Acute rejection occurred in 38% of ELISPOT (+) patients versus 14% of ELISPOT (-) patients (P = 0.008). The median (HD) vintage was 46 mo (0 to 125 mo) in ELISPOT (+) patients versus 24 mo (0 to 276 mo) in ELISPOT (-) patients (P = 0.009). Black recipients had a greater median HD vintage (55 versus 14 mo in nonblack recipients; P < 0.001). Black recipients with less HD exposure had a low incidence of an ELISPOT (+) test, similar to nonblack recipients. Among variables examined, only HD vintage remained a significant positive correlate with an ELISPOT (+) result (odds ratio per year of HD 1.3; P = 0.003). These data suggest that the risk for developing cross-reactive antidonor T cell immunity increases with longer HD vintage, providing an explanation for the previously observed relationship between increased dialysis exposure and worse posttransplantation outcome. Longer HD vintage may also explain the increased T cell alloreactivity that previously was observed in black kidney recipients.

Citing Articles

Impact of Dialysis Time on Long-term Outcomes in HLA-identical Living Donor Kidney Transplant Recipients.

Ferreira E, Requiao-Moura L, Nakamura M, Foresto R, Pestana J, Tedesco-Silva H Transplant Direct. 2024; 10(9):e1703.

PMID: 39188532 PMC: 11346849. DOI: 10.1097/TXD.0000000000001703.


Improved renal allograft survival for pre-emptive paediatric renal transplant recipients in the UK.

Marlais M, Martin K, Marks S Arch Dis Child. 2021; 106(12):1191-1194.

PMID: 34016592 PMC: 8666698. DOI: 10.1136/archdischild-2020-321277.


Endogenous memory T cells with donor-reactivity: early post-transplant mediators of acute graft injury in unsensitized recipients.

Koritzinsky E, Tsuda H, Fairchild R Transpl Int. 2021; 34(8):1360-1373.

PMID: 33963616 PMC: 8389524. DOI: 10.1111/tri.13900.


Pretransplant Donor-specific IFNγ ELISPOT as a Predictor of Graft Rejection: A Diagnostic Test Accuracy Meta-analysis.

Montero N, Farouk S, Gandolfini I, Crespo E, Jarque M, Meneghini M Transplant Direct. 2019; 5(5):e451.

PMID: 31165086 PMC: 6511445. DOI: 10.1097/TXD.0000000000000886.


Impact of the pretransplant dialysis modality on kidney transplantation outcomes: a nationwide cohort study.

Lin H, Liu F, Lin J, Pang S, Yu H BMJ Open. 2018; 8(6):e020558.

PMID: 29866727 PMC: 5988177. DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2017-020558.