Abstract
Background: Approximately 25% of kidney transplant recipients develop de novo anti-HLA donor-specific antibodies (dnDSA) leading to acute antibody-mediated rejection (ABMR) in 30% of patients. Preemptive therapeutic strategies are not available. Methods: We conducted a prospective observational study including 11 kidney transplant recipients. Inclusion criteria were dnDSA occurring within the first year after transplant and normal allograft biopsy. All patients were treated with high-dose IVIG (2 g/kg 0, 1 and 2 months postdnDSA). The primary efficacy outcome was incidence of clinical and subclinical acute ABMR within 12 months after dnDSA detection as compared to a historical control group (IVIG-). Results: Acute ABMR occurred in 2 or 11 patients in the IVIG+ group and in 1 of 9 patients in the IVIGgroup. IVIG treatment did not affect either class I or class II DSA, as observed at the end of the follow-up. IVIG treatment significantly decreased FcγRIIA mRNA expression in circulating leukocytes, but did not affect the expression of any other markers of B cell activation. Conclusions: In this first pilot study including kidney allograft recipients with early dnDSA, preemptive treatment with high-dose IVIG alone did not prevent acute ABMR and had minimal effects on DSA outcome and B cell phenotype.
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CITATION STYLE
Matignon, M., Pilon, C., Commereuc, M., Grondin, C., Leibler, C., Kofman, T., … Grimbert, P. (2017). Intravenous immunoglobulin therapy in kidney transplant recipients with de novo DSA: Results of an observational study. PLoS ONE, 12(6). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0178572
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