Kidney allograft inflammation and fibrosis, causes and consequences

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Abstract

This study assessed the development of allograft interstitial fibrosis and inflammation (GIF+"i"), a histologic pattern associated with reduced graft survival. Included are 795 adults, recipients of kidney allografts from 2000 to 2006. GIF+"i" was diagnosed in surveillance and clinical biopsies that had no transplant glomerulopathy. With time, posttransplant increasing number of grafts showed GIF+"i" and these patients had reduced death-censored graft survival (HR = 4.33 (2.49-7.53), p < 0.0001). Development of GIF+"i" was related to prior acute cellular rejection (ACR), BK nephropathy (PVAN), increasing number of HLA mismatches, retransplantation and DGF. However, 46.4% of GIF+"i" cases had no history of ACR or PVAN. Anti-HLA antibodies at transplant did not relate to GIF+"i" and these patients had no increased frequency of new antibody formation posttransplant. Post-ACR biopsies showed that GIF+"i" developed more commonly after clinically and/or histologically more severe ACR. Graft inflammation persisted in 38.7 and 29.6% of grafts 2 and 12 months post-ACR. Twelve months post-ACR, 27.1% of biopsies developed moderate-severe GIF and 51.8% showed GIF and inflammation. Persistent inflammation and progressive GIF is often subclinical but may lead to graft failure. GIF+"i" can be initiated by multiple etiologies but it is often postinfectious or due to persistent cellular immune-mediated injury. This study analyzes "graft interstitial fibrosis associated with inflammation" after kidney transplantation, the factors that relate to its development, and its implications for graft survival. © 2011 The American Society of Transplantation and the American Society of Transplant Surgeons.

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APA

Gago, M., Cornell, L. D., Kremers, W. K., Stegall, M. D., & Cosio, F. G. (2012). Kidney allograft inflammation and fibrosis, causes and consequences. American Journal of Transplantation, 12(5), 1199–1207. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1600-6143.2011.03911.x

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