High-quality biomarkers that detect emergent graft damage and/or rejection after solid-organ transplantation offer new opportunities to improve post-transplant monitoring, allow early therapeutic intervention and facilitate personalized patient management. Donor-derived cell-free DNA (DD-cfDNA) is a particularly exciting minimally invasive biomarker because it has the potential to be quantitative, time-sensitive and cost-effective. Increased DD-cfDNA has been associated with graft damage and rejection episodes. Efforts are underway to further improve sensitivity and specificity. This review summarizes the procedures used to process and detect DD-cfDNA, measurement of DD-cfDNA in clinical transplantation, approaches for improving sensitivity and specificity and long-term prospects as a transplant biomarker to supplement traditional organ monitoring and invasive biopsies.
CITATION STYLE
Edwards, R. L., Menteer, J., Lestz, R. M., & Baxter-Lowe, L. A. (2022, April 1). Cell-free DNA as a solid-organ transplant biomarker: technologies and approaches. Biomarkers in Medicine. Newlands Press Ltd. https://doi.org/10.2217/bmm-2021-0968
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