4.6 Article

A Probabilistic Approach to Histologic Diagnosis of Antibody-Mediated Rejection in Kidney Transplant Biopsies

Journal

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF TRANSPLANTATION
Volume 17, Issue 1, Pages 129-139

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/ajt.13934

Keywords

basic (laboratory) research; science; clinical research; practice; kidney transplantation; nephrology; pathology; histopathology; rejection: antibody-mediated (ABMR); biopsy; mathematical model; microarray; gene array

Funding

  1. Novartis Pharma AG
  2. Genome Canada
  3. Canada Foundation for Innovation
  4. University of Alberta Hospital Foundation
  5. Roche Molecular Systems
  6. Hoffmann-La Roche Canada Ltd.
  7. Alberta Ministry of Advanced Education and Technology
  8. Roche Organ Transplant Research Foundation
  9. Astellas

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Histologic diagnosis of antibody-mediated rejection (ABMR) in kidney transplant biopsies uses lesion score cutoffs such as 0 versus >0 rather than actual scores and requires donor-specific antibody (DSA); however, cutoffs lose information, and DSA is not always reliable. Using microarray-derived molecular ABMR scores as a histology-independent estimate of ABMR in 703 biopsies, we reassessed criteria for ABMR to determine relative importance of various lesions, the utility of equations using actual scores rather than cutoffs, and the potential for diagnosing ABMR when DSA is unknown or negative. We confirmed that the important features for ABMR diagnosis were peritubular capillaritis (ptc), glomerulitis (g), glomerular double contours, DSA and C4d staining, but we questioned some features: arterial fibrosis, vasculitis, acute tubular injury, and sum of ptc+g scores. Regression equations using lesion scores predicted molecular ABMR more accurately than score cutoffs (area under the curve 0.85-0.86 vs. 0.75). DSA positivity improved accuracy, but regression equations predicted ABMR with moderate accuracy when DSA was unknown. Some biopsies without detectable DSA had high probability of ABMR by regression, although most had HLA antibody. We concluded that regression equations using lesion scores plus DSA maximized diagnostic accuracy and can estimate probable ABMR when DSA is unknown or undetectable. A regression equation incorporating lesions, donor-specific antibodies, and C4d results allows for more accurate diagnosis of antibody-mediated rejection, allowing an occasional diagnosis when antibody status is unknown or even negative if other features are unequivocal.

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