HLA-DQ Mismatching: Mounting Evidence for a Role in Kidney Transplant Rejection.
نویسندگان
چکیده
The HLA system consists of a group of cell surface proteins encoded for by genes located on the short arm of chromosome 6. Since the discovery of this system in the 1950s, it has become clear that HLA molecules play an important role in controlling immune responses generated by the interaction of these proteins with foreign antigens. Humans have three class 1 HLA antigens (A, B, and C) that are present on all nucleated cells and three categories of class 2 HLA antigens (DR, DQ, and DP) present only on antigenpresenting cells and lymphocytes. It is well recognized that mismatches between the HLA antigens of a recipient and donor form a major barrier to successful outcomes after kidney transplantation, increasing the risk of rejection and graft loss. Techniques for HLA typing have evolved from simple serologic methods to advanced molecular techniques (1,2) as it has become increasingly clear that serologically indistinguishable HLA molecules may have functionally distinct allelic products. After the first International Histocompatibility Workshop in 1964, HLA matching became the cornerstone of deceased donor organ allocation policies (3,4). Although HLA mismatching remains an independent risk factor for poor allograft outcomes in the modern era (5), the quantitative contribution of HLAmatching in modern allocation algorithms has decreased progressively over time. In the United States, matching of HLA-A, -B, -C, and -DR antigens was included in early allocation algorithms. With time and experience, it became evident that mismatches of class 1 HLA antigens were less detrimental to allograft outcomes than mismatches of class 2 antigens. In the current United Network For Organ Sharing point system for kidney allocation, only HLA-DR matching is included. Until recently, the effect of HLA-DQ or -DP matching or mismatching on transplant outcomes has been less certain, in part because accurate identification of these class 2moleculeshas reliedmoreheavilyonDNAsequencing than the more traditionally studied HLA antigens. In this issue of the Clinical Journal of the American Society of Nephrology, Lim et al. (6) use data from the Australian and New Zealand Dialysis and Transplant Registry to analyze the effect of HLA-DQmismatching on the outcomes of primary kidney transplants performed between 2004 and 2012. Of the 6107 patients receiving primary transplants during this period, 87% were excluded from the analysis because of missing HLA-DQ molecular typing, leaving only 788 patients available for the study. Patients were classified as having either zero HLA-DQ mismatches or one or two HLA-DQ mismatches. The studied outcomes were acute rejection, graft loss, and graft function measured as eGFR. In univariate analyses, compared with patients with zero HLA-DQ mismatches, those with one or two HLA-DQ mismatches exhibited significantly higher rates of acute rejection classified as any rejection episode (16% versus 25%; P,0.01), late rejection (.6 months post-transplant; 2% versus 6%; P50.03), or antibody–mediated acute rejection (4% versus 8%; P50.01). Clinical variables included in themultivariate analyses included donor age and type (living versus deceased) and recipient age, sex, cause of ESRD, waiting time, smoking history, presence of coronary artery disease, percentage of panel-reactive antibodies, use of induction therapy, total ischemic time, and type of initial immunosuppression. There were no statistically significant associations between HLA-DQ mismatchingandgraft lossorgraft functionusing eitherunivariate or multivariate analyses. One reason why the effects of HLA-DQ matching have been underemphasized in the past has been the assumption that HLA-DQ matching closely parallels HLA-DR matching because of linkage disequilibrium, reflecting the proximity of the two genes on chromosome 6. However, in the study by Lim et al. (6), concordance between HLA-DQ and HLA-DR was observed more commonly in patients who had a DQ-DR mismatch (of the 467 patients with one or two HLA-DQ mismatches, 94% also had HLA-DR mismatches) than in patients who had a zero HLA-DQ mismatch (of 321 patients with zero HLA-DQmismatches, 54% exhibited HLA-DR mismatches). In multivariate analyses, the effect of HLA-DQ mismatching on any acute rejection episode or late acute rejection was independent of mismatching of HLA-A, -B, and -DR antigens. However, when acute antibody–mediated rejectionwas the dependent variable, there was a statistically significant interaction between HLA-DR mismatching and HLA-DQ mismatching, with the risk of antibody-mediated rejection observed at a higher rate only in HLA-DQ mismatched patients who also had an HLA-DR mismatch. Results of this analysis from the large and robust Australia and New Zealand Dialysis and Transplant Division of Nephrology and Hypertension and the Transplant Institute, University Hospitals Case Medical Center, Cleveland, Ohio
منابع مشابه
The Predictive Value of HLA-DR Matching and Cytokine Gene Polymorphisms in Renal Allograft Acute Rejection: A Living-unrelated Donor (LURD) Study
Background: In addition to Human Leukocyte Antigens (HLA) compatibility, gene polymorphisms in cytokines might also be important in the quality of allogeneic immune response. Objective: To evaluate the influence of HLA-DR matching and a number of cytokine gene polymorphisms on acute rejection after living-unrelated donor (LURD) kidney transplantation. Methods: A total of 42 renal transplants pe...
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BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES The current allocation algorithm for deceased donor kidney transplantation takes into consideration HLA mismatches at the ABDR loci but not HLA mismatches at other loci, including HLA-DQ. However, the independent effects of incompatibilities for the closely linked HLA-DQ antigens in the context of HLA-DR antigen matched and mismatched allografts are uncertain. We aimed...
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ورودعنوان ژورنال:
- Clinical journal of the American Society of Nephrology : CJASN
دوره 11 5 شماره
صفحات -
تاریخ انتشار 2016