4.3 Article

Tocilizumab for treatment of chronic active antibody-mediated rejection in kidney transplant recipients

Journal

CLINICAL TRANSPLANTATION
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/ctr.14936

Keywords

chronic rejection; dd-cfDNA; DSA; kidney transplant; tocilizumab

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This study aimed to investigate the use of TCZ as a treatment option for ca-AMR. The results showed that TCZ can reduce graft injury caused by chronic active antibody-mediated rejection and modulate the immune response, while stabilizing graft function and reducing proteinuria. Overall, the study highlights the potential effectiveness of TCZ in treating ca-AMR. Rating: 8 points
BackgroundThe optimal treatment for chronic active antibody-mediated rejection (ca-AMR) remains unclear. Tocilizumab (TCZ), a monoclonal antibody against IL-6, has been proposed as a therapeutic option. We reported our experience treating ca-AMR with TCZ either as the first line option or as a rescue therapy. MethodsWe studied 11 adult kidney transplant recipients with biopsy-proven ca-AMR and preserved kidney function (eGFR 57 +/- 18) who were treated with TCZ (8 mg/kg IV monthly). All biopsies were prompted by abnormal surveillance biomarker testing with DSA and/or dd-cfDNA. Clinical monitoring included dd-cfDNA and DSA testing every 3 months during the treatment with TCZ. ResultsIn this cohort, ca-AMR was diagnosed at a median of 90 months (range 14-224) post-transplant, and 4 of 11 patients had DSA negative ca-AMR. Patients received a minimum of 3 months of TCZ, with 6 patients receiving at least 12 months of TCZ. Dd-cfDNA was elevated in all patients, with a median 2.24% at the start of TCZ treatment. After 6 months of TCZ treatment, 8/11 patients had dd- cfDNA <1%, and 3/11 had values <0.5%. Among those who completed at least 12 months of TCZ, dd-cfDNA decreased by 29% at 6 months (p = .05) and 47% by 12 months (p = .04). DSA also stabilized and, by 12 months, was reduced by 29% (p = .047). Graft function remained stable with no graft loss during treatment. There was a nonsignificant trend towards proteinuria reduction. During the course of treatment with tocilizumab, two patients experienced moderate to severe infections. ConclusionsIn our early short-term experience, TCZ appears to reduce graft injury as measured by dd-cfDNA and modulate the immune response as evident by a modest reduction in immunodominant DSA MFI. Allograft function and proteinuria also stabilized.

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