4.7 Article

HLA-DQ Mismatches Lead to More Unacceptable Antigens, Greater Sensitization, and Increased Disparities in Repeat Transplant Candidates

Journal

JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN SOCIETY OF NEPHROLOGY
Volume 33, Issue 12, Pages 2293-2305

Publisher

AMER SOC NEPHROLOGY
DOI: 10.1681/ASN.2022030296

Keywords

cadaver organ transplantation; chronic rejection; end stage renal disease; kidney donation; kidney transplantation; organ transplant; renal transplantation; transplantation; transplant outcomes; transplant pathology

Funding

  1. Paul I. Terasaki Memorial Research Fund
  2. National Institute for Health Research fellowship
  3. [PDF-2016-09-065]

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This study found that HLA-DQ mismatches had the strongest association with donor-specific antibodies, particularly in African American and Hispanic recipients. The effect of HLA-DQ on calculated panel reactive antibody (cPRA) increase was equivalent or larger than any other HLA locus. Therefore, the effects of HLA-DQ should be considered in kidney allocation.
Background In single-center studies, HLA-DQ mismatches stimulate the most pathogenic donor-specific antibodies. However, because of limitations of transplant registries, this cannot be directly confirmed with registry-based analyses. Methods We evaluated patients in the Scientific Registry of Transplant Recipients who were relisted after renal graft failure with new, unacceptable antigens corresponding to the HLA typing of their previous donor (UA-PD) as a proxy for donor-specific antibodies. Linear regression was applied to estimate the effects of HLA mismatches on UA-PD and the effects of UA-PD on calculated panel reactive antibody (cPRA) values for 4867 kidney recipients from 2010 to 2021. Results Each additional HLA-DQ mismatch increased the probability of UA-PD by 25.2% among deceased donor transplant recipients and by 28.9% among living donor transplant recipients, significantly more than all other HLA loci (P < 0.05). HLA-DQ UA-PD increased cPRA by 29.0% in living donor transplant recipients and by 23.5% in deceased donor transplant recipients, significantly more than all loci except for HLA-A in deceased donor transplant recipients (23.1%). African American deceased donor transplant recipients were significantly more likely than Hispanic and White recipients to develop HLA-DQ UA-PD; among living donor transplant recipients, African American or Hispanic recipients were significantly more likely to do so compared with White recipients. Models evaluating interactions between HLA-DR/DQ mismatches revealed largely independent effects of HLA-DQ mismatches on HLA-DQ UA-PD. Conclusions HLA-DQ mismatches had the strongest associations with UA-PD, an effect that was greatest in African American and Hispanic recipients. cPRA increases with HLA-DQ UA-PD were equivalent or larger than any other HLA locus. This suggests a need to consider the effects of HLA-DQ in kidney allocation.

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