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Outcomes at 3 years post-transplant in imlifidase-desensitized kidney transplant patients

Kjellman, Christian; Maldonado, Angela Q; Sjöholm, Kristoffer; Lonze, Bonnie E; Montgomery, Robert A; Runström, Anna; Lorant, Tomas; Desai, Niraj M; Legendre, Christophe; Lundgren, Torbjörn; von Zur Mühlen, Bengt; Vo, Ashley A; Olsson, HÃ¥kan; Jordan, Stanley C
Imlifidase is a cysteine proteinase which specifically cleaves IgG, inhibiting Fc-mediated effector function within hours of administration. Imlifidase converts a positive crossmatch to a potential donor (T cell, B cell, or both), to negative, enabling transplantation to occur between previously HLA incompatible donor-recipient pairs. To date, 39 crossmatch positive patients received imlifidase prior to a kidney transplant in four single-arm, open-label, phase 2 studies. At 3 years, for patients who were AMR+ compared to AMR-, death-censored allograft survival was 93% vs 77%, patient survival was 85% vs 94%, and mean eGFR was 49 ml/min/1.73 m2 vs 61 ml/min/1.73 m2 , respectively. The incidence of AMR was 38% with most episodes occurring within the first month post-transplantation. Sub-analysis of patients deemed highly sensitized with cPRA ≥ 99.9%, and unlikely to be transplanted who received crossmatch-positive, deceased donor transplants had similar rates of patient survival, graft survival, and eGFR but a higher rate of AMR. These data demonstrate that outcomes and safety up to 3 years in recipients of imlifidase-enabled allografts is comparable to outcomes in other highly sensitized patients undergoing HLA-incompatible transplantation. Thus, imlifidase is a potent option to facilitate transplantation among patients who have a significant immunologic barrier to successful kidney transplantation. Clinical Trial: ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT02790437), EudraCT Number: 2016-002064-13.
PMID: 34236770
ISSN: 1600-6143
CID: 4951052

Dynamic prediction of renal survival among deeply phenotyped kidney transplant recipients using artificial intelligence: an observational, international, multicohort study

Raynaud, Marc; Aubert, Olivier; Divard, Gillian; Reese, Peter P; Kamar, Nassim; Yoo, Daniel; Chin, Chen-Shan; Bailly, Élodie; Buchler, Matthias; Ladrière, Marc; Le Quintrec, Moglie; Delahousse, Michel; Juric, Ivana; Basic-Jukic, Nikolina; Crespo, Marta; Silva, Helio Tedesco; Linhares, Kamilla; Ribeiro de Castro, Maria Cristina; Soler Pujol, Gervasio; Empana, Jean-Philippe; Ulloa, Camilo; Akalin, Enver; Böhmig, Georg; Huang, Edmund; Stegall, Mark D; Bentall, Andrew J; Montgomery, Robert A; Jordan, Stanley C; Oberbauer, Rainer; Segev, Dorry L; Friedewald, John J; Jouven, Xavier; Legendre, Christophe; Lefaucheur, Carmen; Loupy, Alexandre
BACKGROUND:Kidney allograft failure is a common cause of end-stage renal disease. We aimed to develop a dynamic artificial intelligence approach to enhance risk stratification for kidney transplant recipients by generating continuously refined predictions of survival using updates of clinical data. METHODS:In this observational study, we used data from adult recipients of kidney transplants from 18 academic transplant centres in Europe, the USA, and South America, and a cohort of patients from six randomised controlled trials. The development cohort comprised patients from four centres in France, with all other patients included in external validation cohorts. To build deeply phenotyped cohorts of transplant recipients, the following data were collected in the development cohort: clinical, histological, immunological variables, and repeated measurements of estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) and proteinuria (measured using the proteinuria to creatininuria ratio). To develop a dynamic prediction system based on these clinical assessments and repeated measurements, we used a Bayesian joint models-an artificial intelligence approach. The prediction performances of the model were assessed via discrimination, through calculation of the area under the receiver operator curve (AUC), and calibration. This study is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT04258891. FINDINGS/RESULTS:13 608 patients were included (3774 in the development cohort and 9834 in the external validation cohorts) and contributed 89 328 patient-years of data, and 416 510 eGFR and proteinuria measurements. Bayesian joint models showed that recipient immunological profile, allograft interstitial fibrosis and tubular atrophy, allograft inflammation, and repeated measurements of eGFR and proteinuria were independent risk factors for allograft survival. The final model showed accurate calibration and very high discrimination in the development cohort (overall dynamic AUC 0·857 [95% CI 0·847-0·866]) with a persistent improvement in AUCs for each new repeated measurement (from 0·780 [0·768-0·794] to 0·926 [0·917-0·932]; p<0·0001). The predictive performance was confirmed in the external validation cohorts from Europe (overall AUC 0·845 [0·837-0·854]), the USA (overall AUC 0·820 [0·808-0·831]), South America (overall AUC 0·868 [0·856-0·880]), and the cohort of patients from randomised controlled trials (overall AUC 0·857 [0·840-0·875]). INTERPRETATION/CONCLUSIONS:Because of its dynamic design, this model can be continuously updated and holds value as a bedside tool that could refine the prognostic judgements of clinicians in everyday practice, hence enhancing precision medicine in the transplant setting. FUNDING/BACKGROUND:MSD Avenir, French National Institute for Health and Medical Research, and Bettencourt Schueller Foundation.
PMID: 34756569
ISSN: 2589-7500
CID: 5050482

Clinical and Financial Implications of 2 Treatment Strategies for Donor-derived Hepatitis C Infections

Stewart, Zoe A; Stern, Jeffrey; Ali, Nicole M; Kalia, Harmit S; Khalil, Karen; Jonchhe, Srijana; Weldon, Elaina P; Dieter, Rebecca A; Lewis, Tyler C; Funches, Nur; Crosby, Sudara; Seow, Monique; Berger, Jonathan C; Dagher, Nabil N; Gelb, Bruce E; Watkins, Anthony C; Moazami, Nader; Smith, Deane E; Kon, Zachary N; Chang, Stephanie H; Reyentovich, Alex; Angel, Luis F; Montgomery, Robert A; Lonze, Bonnie E
Transplanting hepatitis C viremic donor organs into hepatitis C virus (HCV)-negative recipients is becoming increasingly common; however, practices for posttransplant direct-acting antiviral (DAA) treatment vary widely. Protracted insurance authorization processes for DAA therapy often lead to treatment delays.
PMCID:8425828
PMID: 34514117
ISSN: 2373-8731
CID: 5067212

SARS-CoV-2 Vaccination, Immune Responses, and Antibody Testing in Immunosuppressed Populations: Tip of the Iceberg [Comment]

Woodle, E Steve; Gebel, Howard M; Montgomery, Robert A; Maltzman, Jonathan S
PMID: 34144554
ISSN: 1534-6080
CID: 4995322

Development of COVID-19 Infection in Transplant Recipients After SARS-CoV-2 Vaccination [Comment]

Ali, Nicole M; Alnazari, Nasser; Mehta, Sapna A; Boyarsky, Brian; Avery, Robin K; Segev, Dorry L; Montgomery, Robert A; Stewart, Zoe A
PMID: 34049360
ISSN: 1534-6080
CID: 5066482

Impact of the 2014 kidney allocation system changes on trends in A2/A2B into B kidney transplantation and organ procurement organization reporting of donor subtyping

Stern, Jeffrey; Alnazari, Nasser; Tatapudi, Vasishta S; Ali, Nicole M; Stewart, Zoe A; Montgomery, Robert A; Lonze, Bonnie E
The current kidney allocation system (KAS) preferentially allocates kidneys from blood type A2 or A2B (A/A2B) donors to blood type B candidates. We used national data to evaluate center-level performance of A2/A2B to B transplants, and organ procurement organization (OPO) reporting of type A or AB donor subtyping, in 5-year time periods prior to (2009-2014) and following (2015-2019) KAS implementation. The number of centers performing A2/A2B to B transplants increased from 17 pre-KAS to 76 post-KAS, though this still represents only a minority of centers (7.3% pre-KAS and 32.6% post-KAS). For high-performing centers, the median net increase in A2/A2B to B transplants was 19 cases (range -2-72) per center in the 5 years post-KAS. The median net increase in total B recipient transplants was 21 cases (range -17-119) per center. Despite requirements for performance of subtyping, in 2019 subtyping was reported on only 56.4% of A/AB donors. This translates into potential missed opportunities for B recipients, and even post-KAS up to 2322 A2/A2B donor kidneys may have been allocated for transplantation as A/AB. Further progress must be made both at center and OPO levels to broaden implementation of A2/A2B to B transplants for the benefit of underserved recipients.
PMID: 34165821
ISSN: 1399-0012
CID: 4934142

Imlifidase Desensitization in Crossmatch-positive, Highly Sensitized Kidney Transplant Recipients: Results of an International Phase 2 Trial (Highdes)

Jordan, Stanley C; Legendre, Christophe; Desai, Niraj M; Lorant, Tomas; Bengtsson, Mats; Lonze, Bonnie E; Vo, Ashley A; Runström, Anna; Laxmyr, Lena; Sjöholm, Kristoffer; Schiött, Ã…sa; Sonesson, Elisabeth; Wood, Kathryn; Winstedt, Lena; Kjellman, Christian; Montgomery, Robert A
BACKGROUND:Highly HLA sensitized patients have limited access to life-saving kidney transplantation because of a paucity of immunologically suitable donors. Imlifidase is a cysteine protease that cleaves IgG leading to a rapid decrease in antibody level and inhibition of IgG-mediated injury. This study investigates the efficacy and safety of imlifidase in converting a positive crossmatch test to negative, allowing highly sensitized patients to be transplanted with a living or deceased donor kidney. METHODS:This open-label, single-arm, phase 2 trial conducted at 5 transplant centers, evaluated the ability of imlifidase to create a negative crossmatch test within 24 h. Secondary endpoints included postimlifidase donor-specific antibody levels compared with predose levels, renal function, and pharmacokinetic/pharmacodynamic profiles. Safety endpoints included adverse events and immunogenicity profile. RESULTS:Of the transplanted patients, 89.5% demonstrated conversion of baseline positive crossmatch to negative within 24 h after imlifidase treatment. Donor-specific antibodies most often rebounded 3-14 d postimlifidase dose, with substantial interpatient variability. Patient survival was 100% with graft survival of 88.9% at 6 mo. With this, 38.9% had early biopsy proven antibody-mediated rejection with onset 2-19 d posttransplantation. Serum IgG levels began to normalize after ~3-7 d posttransplantation. Antidrug antibody levels were consistent with previous studies. Seven adverse events in 6 patients were classified as possibly or probably related to treatment and were mild-moderate in severity. CONCLUSIONS:Imlifidase was well tolerated, converted positive crossmatches to negative, and enabled patients with a median calculated panel-reactive antibody of 99.83% to undergo kidney transplantation resulting in good kidney function and graft survival at 6 mo.
PMID: 33093408
ISSN: 1534-6080
CID: 5003552

SARS-CoV-2 Vaccination and Antibody Testing in Immunosuppressed Populations: You Can't Tell the Players Without a Scorecard [RETRACTED] [Correction]

Woodle, E Steve; Gebel, Howard M; Montgomery, Robert A; Maltzman, Jonathan S
PMID: 34224542
ISSN: 1534-6080
CID: 5148002

Early detection of SARS-CoV-2 and other infections in solid organ transplant recipients and household members using wearable devices

Keating, Brendan J; Mukhtar, Eyas H; Elftmann, Eric D; Eweje, Feyisope R; Gao, Hui; Ibrahim, Lina I; Kathawate, Ranganath G; Lee, Alexander C; Li, Eric H; Moore, Krista A; Nair, Nikhil; Chaluvadi, Venkata; Reason, Janaiya; Zanoni, Francesca; Honkala, Alexander T; Al-Ali, Amein K; Abdullah Alrubaish, Fatima; Ahmad Al-Mozaini, Maha; Al-Muhanna, Fahad A; Al-Romaih, Khaldoun; Goldfarb, Samuel B; Kellogg, Ryan; Kiryluk, Krzysztof; Kizilbash, Sarah J; Kohut, Taisa J; Kumar, Juhi; O'Connor, Matthew J; Rand, Elizabeth B; Redfield, Robert R; Rolnik, Benjamin; Rossano, Joseph; Sanchez, Pablo G; Alavi, Arash; Bahmani, Amir; Bogu, Gireesh K; Brooks, Andrew W; Metwally, Ahmed A; Mishra, Tejas; Marks, Stephen D; Montgomery, Robert A; Fishman, Jay A; Amaral, Sandra; Jacobson, Pamala A; Wang, Meng; Snyder, Michael P
The increasing global prevalence of SARS-CoV-2 and the resulting COVID-19 disease pandemic pose significant concerns for clinical management of solid organ transplant recipients (SOTR). Wearable devices that can measure physiologic changes in biometrics including heart rate, heart rate variability, body temperature, respiratory, activity (such as steps taken per day) and sleep patterns, and blood oxygen saturation show utility for the early detection of infection before clinical presentation of symptoms. Recent algorithms developed using preliminary wearable datasets show that SARS-CoV-2 is detectable before clinical symptoms in >80% of adults. Early detection of SARS-CoV-2, influenza, and other pathogens in SOTR, and their household members, could facilitate early interventions such as self-isolation and early clinical management of relevant infection(s). Ongoing studies testing the utility of wearable devices such as smartwatches for early detection of SARS-CoV-2 and other infections in the general population are reviewed here, along with the practical challenges to implementing these processes at scale in pediatric and adult SOTR, and their household members. The resources and logistics, including transplant-specific analyses pipelines to account for confounders such as polypharmacy and comorbidities, required in studies of pediatric and adult SOTR for the robust early detection of SARS-CoV-2, and other infections are also reviewed.
PMID: 33735480
ISSN: 1432-2277
CID: 4873672

Use of donor blood expedites hcv genotyping and allows earlier DAA initiation for recipients of HCV+ kidneys [Meeting Abstract]

Lonze, B; Ali, N; Montgomery, R; Stewart, Lewis Z
Purpose: Utilization of HCV viremic donor kidneys for transplant into HCV naive recipients has become more widespread, yet best practices governing the initiation, timing or duration of direct acting antiviral (DAA) therapy are lacking. Most published series describe DAA initiation weeks to months after transplant. However, fibrosing cholestatic hepatitis has been reported with delayed DAA initiation. Herein we report our center practice utilizing donor blood for HCV genotyping to expedite DAA insurance approval and minimize the duration of recipient viremia.
Method(s): Patients received education and DAA insurance benefits were ensured prior to listing for HCV+ organs. At the time of transplant, donor blood accompanying the kidney was used for HCV genotyping. Results were received within one week of transplant. Recipients were screened for HCV RNA by POD#4, and weekly for 12 weeks. Insurance authorization for DAA coverage was sought after both recipient viremia and donor HCV genotyping resulted. In 3 cases, donor viral load was insufficient for genotyping, and these recipients were genotyped once viremic.
Result(s): 80 hepatitis C naive patients received hepatitis C positive donor kidneys between July, 2018 and October, 2020. 17 donors were HCV Ab+/NAT-and 63 donors were HCV Ab+/NAT+. All recipients of NAT+ donor organs became viremic; 89% were genotype 1a or 3. The median time to DAA initiation was 10 days for cases with donor genotyping (IQR 8-13). In contrast, the median time to DAA initiation was 20 days for the 3 cases with recipient genotyping (IQR 18-24). Median time from transplant to clearance of HCV viremia was 38 days (IQR 30-47) (Table 1). SVR12 was achieved in all patients, and no cases of fibrosing cholestatic hepatitis have been observed. There were 2 needlestick exposures of patient family members, though no HCV transmission occurred.
Conclusion(s): Early HCV genotyping using donor blood results in expedited initiation of DAA therapy for recipients of HCV+ kidneys. Compared to published reports, our patients are clearing viremia at the time that most other centers' patients are initiating DAA therapy. Whether duration of viremia or peak viral load are associated with adverse allograft events such as acute rejection is not known. The advantages to a shortened duration of HCV viremia remain to be characterized, but may include a lower risk of fibrosing cholestatic hepatitis and lower risk of HCV exposure to family members and caregivers. Our practice of expedited genotyping using donor blood is immediately implementable at all centers performing these transplants. (Table Presented)
EMBASE:636328463
ISSN: 1600-6143
CID: 5180052