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258


Quantifying renal allograft loss following early antibody-mediated rejection

Orandi, B J; Chow, E H K; Hsu, A; Gupta, N; Van Arendonk, K J; Garonzik-Wang, J M; Montgomery, J R; Wickliffe, C; Lonze, B E; Bagnasco, S M; Alachkar, N; Kraus, E S; Jackson, A M; Montgomery, R A; Segev, D L
Unlike antibody-mediated rejection (AMR) with clinical features, it remains unclear whether subclinical AMR should be treated, as its effect on allograft loss is unknown. It is also uncertain if AMR's effect is homogeneous across donor (deceased/live) and (HLA/ABO) antibody types. We compared 219 patients with AMR (77 subclinical, 142 clinical) to controls matched on HLA/ABO-compatibility, donor type, prior transplant, panel reactive antibody (PRA), age and year. One and 5-year graft survival in subclinical AMR was 95.9% and 75.7%, compared to 96.8% and 88.4% in matched controls (p = 0.0097). Subclinical AMR was independently associated with a 2.15-fold increased risk of graft loss (95% CI: 1.19-3.91; p = 0.012) compared to matched controls, but not different from clinical AMR (p = 0.13). Fifty three point two percent of subclinical AMR patients were treated with plasmapheresis within 3 days of their AMR-defining biopsy. Treated subclinical AMR patients had no difference in graft loss compared to matched controls (HR 1.73; 95% CI: 0.73-4.05; p = 0.21), but untreated subclinical AMR patients did (HR 3.34; 95% CI: 1.37-8.11; p = 0.008). AMR's effect on graft loss was heterogeneous when stratified by compatible deceased donor (HR = 4.73; 95% CI: 1.57-14.26; p = 0.006), HLA-incompatible deceased donor (HR = 2.39; 95% CI: 1.10-5.19; p = 0.028), compatible live donor (no AMR patients experienced graft loss), ABO-incompatible live donor (HR = 6.13; 95% CI: 0.55-67.70; p = 0.14) and HLA-incompatible live donor (HR = 6.29; 95% CI: 3.81-10.39; p < 0.001) transplant. Subclinical AMR substantially increases graft loss, and treatment seems warranted.
PMCID:4304875
PMID: 25611786
ISSN: 1600-6143
CID: 1979822

A closer look at rituximab induction on HLA antibody rebound following HLA-incompatible kidney transplantation

Jackson, Annette M; Kraus, Edward S; Orandi, Babak J; Segev, Dorry L; Montgomery, Robert A; Zachary, Andrea A
Rituximab has been used to increase the efficacy of desensitization protocols for human leukocyte antigen (HLA)-incompatible kidney transplantation; however, controlled comparisons have not been reported. Here we examined 256 post-transplant HLA antibody levels in 25 recipients desensitized with and 25 without rituximab induction, to determine the impact of B-cell depletion. We found significantly less HLA antibody rebound in the rituximab-treated patients (7% of donor-specific antibodies (DSAs) and 33% of non-DSAs) compared with a control cohort desensitized and transplanted without rituximab (32% DSAs and 55% non-DSAs). The magnitude of the increase was significantly larger among patients who did not receive rituximab. Interestingly, in rituximab-treated patients, of the 39 HLA antibodies that increased post transplant, 34 were specific for HLA mismatches present in previous allografts or pregnancies, implying limited efficacy in memory B-cell depletion. Compared with controls, rituximab-treated patients had a significantly greater mean reduction in DSA (-2505 vs. -292 mean fluorescence intensity), but a similar rate of DSA persistence (52% in rituximab treated-and 40% in non-treated recipients). Thus, rituximab induction in HLA-incompatible recipients reduced the incidence and magnitude of HLA antibody rebound, but did not affect DSA elimination, antibody-mediated rejection, or 5-year allograft survival when compared with recipients desensitized and transplanted without rituximab.
PMCID:4305036
PMID: 25054778
ISSN: 1523-1755
CID: 1979832

Loss of pediatric kidney grafts during the "high-risk age window": insights from pediatric liver and simultaneous liver-kidney recipients

Van Arendonk, K J; King, E A; Orandi, B J; James, N T; Smith, J M; Colombani, P M; Magee, J C; Segev, D L
Pediatric kidney transplant recipients experience a high-risk age window of increased graft loss during late adolescence and early adulthood that has been attributed primarily to sociobehavioral mechanisms such as nonadherence. An examination of how this age window affects recipients of other organs may inform the extent to which sociobehavioral mechanisms are to blame or whether kidney-specific biologic mechanisms may also exist. Graft loss risk across current recipient age was compared between pediatric kidney (n = 17,446), liver (n = 12,161) and simultaneous liver-kidney (n = 224) transplants using piecewise-constant hazard rate models. Kidney graft loss during late adolescence and early adulthood (ages 17-24 years) was significantly greater than during ages <17 (aHR = 1.79, 95%CI = 1.69-1.90, p < 0.001) and ages >24 (aHR = 1.11, 95%CI = 1.03-1.20, p = 0.005). In contrast, liver graft loss during ages 17-24 was no different than during ages <17 (aHR = 1.03, 95%CI = 0.92-1.16, p = 0.6) or ages >24 (aHR = 1.18, 95%CI = 0.98-1.42, p = 0.1). In simultaneous liver-kidney recipients, a trend towards increased kidney compared to liver graft loss was observed during ages 17-24 years. Late adolescence and early adulthood are less detrimental to pediatric liver grafts compared to kidney grafts, suggesting that sociobehavioral mechanisms alone may be insufficient to create the high-risk age window and that additional biologic mechanisms may also be required.
PMCID:4327777
PMID: 25612497
ISSN: 1600-6143
CID: 5519662

Choosing the order of deceased donor and living donor kidney transplantation in pediatric recipients: a Markov decision process model

Van Arendonk, Kyle J; Chow, Eric K H; James, Nathan T; Orandi, Babak J; Ellison, Trevor A; Smith, Jodi M; Colombani, Paul M; Segev, And Dorry L
BACKGROUND:Most pediatric kidney transplant recipients eventually require retransplantation, and the most advantageous timing strategy regarding deceased and living donor transplantation in candidates with only 1 living donor remains unclear. METHODS:A patient-oriented Markov decision process model was designed to compare, for a given patient with 1 living donor, living-donor-first followed if necessary by deceased donor retransplantation versus deceased-donor-first followed if necessary by living donor (if still able to donate) or deceased donor (if not) retransplantation. Based on Scientific Registry of Transplant Recipients data, the model was designed to account for waitlist, graft, and patient survival, sensitization, increased risk of graft failure seen during late adolescence, and differential deceased donor waiting times based on pediatric priority allocation policies. Based on national cohort data, the model was also designed to account for aging or disease development, leading to ineligibility of the living donor over time. RESULTS:Given a set of candidate and living donor characteristics, the Markov model provides the expected patient survival over a time horizon of 20 years. For the most highly sensitized patients (panel reactive antibody > 80%), a deceased-donor-first strategy was advantageous, but for all other patients (panel reactive antibody < 80%), a living-donor-first strategy was recommended. CONCLUSIONS:This Markov model illustrates how patients, families, and providers can be provided information and predictions regarding the most advantageous use of deceased donor versus living donor transplantation for pediatric recipients.
PMCID:4320004
PMID: 25594552
ISSN: 1534-6080
CID: 5519652

Frailty and mortality in kidney transplant recipients

McAdams-DeMarco, M A; Law, A; King, E; Orandi, B; Salter, M; Gupta, N; Chow, E; Alachkar, N; Desai, N; Varadhan, R; Walston, J; Segev, D L
We have previously described strong associations between frailty, a measure of physiologic reserve initially described and validated in geriatrics, and early hospital readmission as well as delayed graft function. The goal of this study was to estimate its association with postkidney transplantation (post-KT) mortality. Frailty was prospectively measured in 537 KT recipients at the time of transplantation between November 2008 and August 2013. Cox proportional hazards models were adjusted for confounders using a novel approach to substantially improve model efficiency and generalizability in single-center studies. We precisely estimated the confounder coefficients using the large sample size of the Scientific Registry of Transplantation Recipients (n = 37 858) and introduced these into the single-center model, which then estimated the adjusted frailty coefficient. At 5 years, the survivals were 91.5%, 86.0% and 77.5% for nonfrail, intermediately frail and frail KT recipients, respectively. Frailty was independently associated with a 2.17-fold (95% CI: 1.01-4.65, p = 0.047) higher risk of death. In conclusion, regardless of age, frailty is a strong, independent risk factor for post-KT mortality, even after carefully adjusting for many confounders using a novel, efficient statistical approach.
PMID: 25359393
ISSN: 1600-6143
CID: 5149902

Industry Payments to Transplant Surgeons [Meeting Abstract]

Ahmed, R; Chow, E; Massie, A; King, E; Orandi, B; Bae, S; Nicholas, L; Lonze, B; Segev, D
ISI:000370124202370
ISSN: 1600-6143
CID: 2209552

Gender Disparity in Infections After Kidney Transplantation [Meeting Abstract]

Bae, S.; Kucirka, L.; Durand, C.; Orandi, B.; Avery, R.; Segev, D.
ISI:000370124200356
ISSN: 1600-6135
CID: 5520552

Early Steroid Withdrawal and Infection Risk in Kidney Transplant Recipients [Meeting Abstract]

Bae, S.; Kucirka, L.; Durand, C.; Orandi, B.; Avery, R.; Segev, D.
ISI:000370124202246
ISSN: 1600-6135
CID: 5520562

Quantifying the Survival Benefit of HLA-Incompatible Kidney Transplantation: A Multi-Center Study [Meeting Abstract]

Orandi, B.; Luo, X.; Massie, A.; Garonzik-Wang, J.; Lonze, B.; Ahmed, R.; Van Arendonk, K.; Montgomery, R.; Segev, D.
ISI:000370124200194
ISSN: 1600-6135
CID: 5520542

Post-Kidney Transplant Infections in Desensitized Patients Receiving Thymoglobulin or Daclizumab Induction: Results of a Randomized Clinical Trial [Meeting Abstract]

Orandi, B.; Locke, J.; Kraus, E.; Lonze, B.; Desai, N.; Dagher, N.; Alachkar, N.; Simpkins, C.; Naqvi, F.; Segev, D.; Montgomery, R.; Avery, R.
ISI:000370124200174
ISSN: 1600-6135
CID: 5520532