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Study of association between antibodies to non-HLA kidney self-antigens and progression to chronic immune injury after kidney transplantation
Journal article   Peer reviewed

Study of association between antibodies to non-HLA kidney self-antigens and progression to chronic immune injury after kidney transplantation

Sumi Nair, Ranjithkumar Ravichandran, Raymond Heilman, Andrés Jaramillo, Matthew Buras, Bruce Kaplan, Yoshihiro Itabashi, Daniel Ramon, Katrin Hacke, Byron Smith, …
Human immunology, Vol.84(10), pp.509-514
10/01/2023
PMID: 37507262

Abstract

Chronic immune injury Chronic rejection Collagen IV Fibronectin IFTA Immune Injury Interstitial fibrosis tubular atrophy Kidney self-antigens Kidney transplant Non-HLA antibodies Perlecan Transplant biopsy
Immune response to several kidney self-antigens (KSAg) such as Collagen IV (Col-IV), Perlecan (PL), and Fibronectin (FN) have been associated with antibody-mediated damage and poor allograft survival. Thus, the aim of this study was to determine if humoral immune responses to KSAg correlates with progression of chronic immune injury (CII) changes at 1 year or 2 years. Kidney transplant recipients who underwent 1- or 2-year biopsies, with chronic interstitial inflammation (ci > 1) and/or glomerular membrane double contouring (cg > 0) were analyzed with matched controls. Sera were analyzed retrospectively for antibodies against KSAg using ELISA. The presence of antibodies to KSAg were compared at 0, 4, 12, and 24 months using logistic regression. We identified a cohort of 214 kidney transplant recipients. Of these, we identified 33 cases and matched 66 controls. Logistical regression showed an odds ratio of 1 with the confidence interval crossing 1 for the presence of response to KSAg at all the time points. Humoral immune responses to either KSAg alone or in combination with donor-specific anti-HLA antibodies are not associated with progression to CII at 1 and 2 years after kidney transplantation.

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