4.6 Article

Validity and utility of urinary CXCL10/Cr immune monitoring in pediatric kidney transplant recipients

Journal

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF TRANSPLANTATION
Volume 21, Issue 4, Pages 1545-1555

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1111/ajt.16336

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR) [274755, 340137]
  2. Flynn Family Chair in Renal Transplantation

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Urinary CXCL10/Cr immune monitoring is useful for real-time clinical monitoring in children, predicting rejection risk, immune quiescence, and allograft function decline. Serial urine samples can anticipate rejection up to 4 weeks prior to biopsy and decline within 1 month following treatment.
Individualized posttransplant immunosuppression is hampered by suboptimal monitoring strategies. To validate the utility of urinary CXCL10/Cr immune monitoring in children, we conducted a multicenter prospective observational study in children <21 years with serial and biopsy-associated urine samples (n = 97). Biopsies (n = 240) were categorized as normal (NOR), rejection (>i1t1; REJ), indeterminate (IND), BKV infection, and leukocyturia (LEU). An independent pediatric cohort of 180 urines was used for external validation. Ninety-seven patients aged 11.4 +/- 5.5 years showed elevated urinary CXCL10/Cr in REJ (3.1, IQR 1.1, 16.4; P < .001) and BKV nephropathy (median = 5.6, IQR 1.3, 26.9; P < .001) vs. NOR (0.8, IQR 0.4, 1.5). The AUC for REJ vs. NOR was 0.76 (95% CI 0.66-0.86). Low (0.63) and high (4.08) CXCL10/Cr levels defined high sensitivity and specificity thresholds, respectively; validated against an independent sample set (AUC = 0.76, 95% CI 0.66-0.86). Serial urines anticipated REJ up to 4 weeks prior to biopsy and declined within 1 month following treatment. Elevated mean CXCL10/Cr was correlated with first-year eGFR decline (rho = -0.37, P <= .001), particularly when persistently exceeding >= 4.08 (ratio = 0.81; P < .04). Useful thresholds for urinary CXCL10/Cr levels reproducibly define the risk of rejection, immune quiescence, and decline in allograft function for use in real-time clinical monitoring in children.

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