The Natural History of Clinical Operational Tolerance After Kidney Transplantation Through Twenty-Seven Cases
Publication year
2012Author(s)
Source
American Journal of Transplantation, 12, 12, (2012), pp. 3296-3307ISSN
Publication type
Article / Letter to editor

Display more detailsDisplay less details
Organization
Nephrology
Journal title
American Journal of Transplantation
Volume
vol. 12
Issue
iss. 12
Page start
p. 3296
Page end
p. 3307
Subject
N4i 4: Auto-immunity, transplantation and immunotherapyAbstract
We report here on a European cohort of 27 kidney transplant recipients displaying operational tolerance, compared to two cohorts of matched kidney transplant recipients under immunosuppression and patients who stopped immunosuppressive drugs and presented with rejection. We report that a lower proportion of operationally tolerant patients received induction therapy (52% without induction therapy vs. 78.3%[p = 0.0455] and 96.7%[p = 0.0001], respectively), a difference likely due to the higher proportion (18.5%) of HLA matched recipients in the tolerant cohort. These patients were also significantly older at the time of transplantation (p = 0.0211) and immunosuppression withdrawal (p = 0.0002) than recipients who rejected their graft after weaning. Finally, these patients were at lower risk of infectious disease. Among the 27 patients defined as operationally tolerant at the time of inclusion, 19 still display stable graft function (mean 9 +/- 4 years after transplantation) whereas 30% presented slow deterioration of graft function. Six of these patients tested positive for pre-graft anti-HLA antibodies. Biopsy histology studies revealed an active immunologically driven mechanism for half of them, associated with DSA in the absence of C4d. This study suggests that operational tolerance can persist as a robust phenomenon, although eventual graft loss does occur in some patients, particularly in the setting of donor-specific alloantibody.
This item appears in the following Collection(s)
- Academic publications [226902]
- Faculty of Medical Sciences [86456]
Upload full text
Use your RU credentials (u/z-number and password) to log in with SURFconext to upload a file for processing by the repository team.