Allograft Rejection: Types and Treatment Strategies



Allograft Rejection: Types and Treatment Strategies


Ashley Vo

Phuong-Chi T. Pham

Phuong-Thu T. Pham



This chapter provides general guidelines for the treatment and management of acute rejection episodes. Referral to a transplant center or consultation with a transplant specialist should be considered at the discretion of the clinician. It should also be noted that practice may vary among transplant centers. Consultation with a transplant center is recommended when a lymphocyte-depleting agent and/or agents targeting against antibodies or the complement system are used.


ALLOGRAFT REJECTION: HYPERACUTE, ACUTE, AND CHRONIC

Allograft rejection can be classified into hyperacute, acute, and chronic rejection. The 2017 updated Banff classification is categorized into six broad categories and is discussed in chapter 9.1 Hyperacute rejection is not classified under Banff categories.


Hyperacute rejection



  • Can occur immediately following vascular anastomosis or within minutes to hours after graft revascularization


  • Uniformly results in graft loss requiring allograft nephrectomy


  • With the current cytotoxic crossmatch and the advent of the single-antigen bead-based Luminex assays (see chapter 1), hyperacute rejection has become virtually nonexistent.2


  • Pathogenesis



    • Caused by preformed antidonor human leukocyte antigen (HLA) antibodies (or cytotoxic antibodies against the graft)


    • Preformed antidonor HLA antibodies bind to graft endothelial antigens and activate complement leading to severe vascular injury, thrombosis, coagulative necrosis, and obliteration of the graft vasculature.


    • In the setting of ABO incompatible transplantation, hyperacute rejection occurs due to preformed anti-ABO antibodies (ABO isoagglutinins).


  • Histopathology (see chapter 9)


Acute rejection

Acute rejection can be classified into acute T cell-mediated rejection (TCMR) or acute antibody-mediated rejection (ABMR). Diagnosis requires allograft biopsy. The 2017
Banff classification of TCMR and ABMR and their histopathologic features are discussed in chapter 9.1



  • Acute TCMR



    • Generally occurs after the first posttransplant week and most commonly within the first 3 to 6 months after transplantation. In unsensitized patients with low levels of preformed anti-HLA antibodies, acute TCMR rarely occurs in the first week.2


    • Clinical manifestations



      • Most patients present with asymptomatic acute rise in serum creatinine.


      • In the early posttransplant period, acute rejection may also manifest as plateauing of serum creatinine at a creatinine level that is higher than expected (also referred to as “high baseline creatinine”).


      • In the era of potent immunosuppression, fever, malaise, oliguria, and graft tenderness are usually absent unless immunosuppression is completely discontinued.


    • Pathogenesis



      • Caused by T cells reacting to donor histocompatibility antigens expressed in the tubules, interstitium, and vessels to various extent


      • Studies suggest that TCMR is a risk factor for the development of de novo antibodies against the allograft and subsequent ABMR.3


  • ABMR



    • Generally occurs early after transplantation


    • ABMR can occur alone or concomitantly with TCMR.


    • Clinical manifestations: allograft dysfunction frequently more severe than that of acute cellular rejection


    • ABMR can occur under two clinical scenarios4:



      • ABMR type 1: caused by persistent preexisting donor-specific antibodies and/or anamnestic or “memory” humoral response against an antigen present on the graft to which the recipient had been previously exposed (eg, through blood transfusion, pregnancy, or previous transplant). Type 1 ABMR is often seen in highly sensitized recipients who underwent pretransplant desensitization protocol to remove antibodies against the donor kidney and most often occurs early after transplantation.


      • ABMR type 2: caused by de novo donor-specific antibodies (dnDSAs), most often occurring after the first posttransplant year (frequently seen in the context of medical nonadherence or inadequate immunosuppression)


    • Pathogenesis



      • Caused by DSA against HLA. Less commonly, other non-HLA antibodies have been implicated in ABMR.


      • Non-HLA are further classified as alloantigens, such as MHC class I-related chain A (MICA) and MHC class I-related chain B (MICB), or as tissue-specific autoantigens, such as the angiotensin II type 1 receptor (AT1R), anti-endothelin-1 type A receptor (ETAR), vimentin, cardiac myosin, collagen V, or agrin (see chapter 1).


Chronic rejection



  • Graft deterioration in the late posttransplant period can be due to alloimmune or nonalloimmune causes or both. Diagnosis requires allograft biopsy. The 2017 Banff classification of chronic active TCMR, chronic active ABMR, and chronic ABMR and their histopathologic features are discussed in chapter 9.1


  • Chronic rejection is an alloimmune-dependent process associated with T cell-mediated and/or antibody-mediated injury.



  • Risk factors: prior acute rejection episodes (TCMR or ABMR or both),5,6 poor HLA matching,7 prior sensitization or posttransplant development of HLA antibodies (de novo or anamnestic response),8 underimmunosuppression, or medical nonadherence


  • Clinical manifestations: Patients generally present with gradual deterioration in kidney allograft function with or without various degrees of proteinuria.


  • Chronic rejection of the kidney transplant is the most common cause of graft loss in the late posttransplant period.


  • Pathogenesis



    • Chronic ABMR is a process in which donor-specific anti-HLA antibodies develop, followed by immune-mediated injury to the kidney allograft. Continuous antibodymediated injury can lead to separation of the endothelial cells from the underlying basement membrane. These cells will, in turn, lay down new basement membrane matrix resulting in the so-called basement membrane duplication and the histologic appearance of transplant glomerulopathy (TG).3


    • Interstitial inflammation in areas of interstitial fibrosis and tubular atrophy (i-IFTA) is considered a potential lesion of chronic active TCMR. However, the pathogenesis of i-IFTA and to what extent this represents a manifestation of TCMR remains to be studied.


TREATMENT OF ACUTE REJECTION


Overview

The approach to the treatment of allograft rejection is guided primarily by the types of rejection (T cell-mediated vs antibody-mediated or concomitant presence of both), the histopathologic severity of rejection as graded by the Banff classification system, and the degree of interstitial fibrosis and tubular atrophy with or without interstitial inflammation (i-IFTA).


Treatment of acute T cell-mediated rejection based on Banff classification



  • Suspicious for rejection



    • Decision to treat with corticosteroid pulse is generally based on clinical history such as severity of acute kidney injury, immunologic risk, history of medical nonadherence, and/or subtherapeutic calcineurin inhibitor levels. Examples



      • Low immunologic risk, 25% (or less) rise in serum creatinine



        • image Observation alone and close follow-up of serum creatinine trend. Consider oral or intravenous corticosteroid pulse if creatinine does not improve or increases on serial measurements.


        • image Consider augmentation of maintenance immunosuppression.


      • More than 25% to 30% rise in serum creatinine, subtherapeutic calcineurin inhibitor levels



        • image Oral or intravenous corticosteroid pulse. The dose of prednisone can be continued at its previous level after completion of the pulse steroid.


        • image Augmentation of maintenance immunosuppression


  • Banff grade 1A



    • High-dose intravenous corticosteroid, usually referred to as “pulse steroid” or “Solu-Medrol pulse” (methylprednisolone pulse) at 5 mg/kg body weight for 3 days. Higher dose such as 500 to 1,000 mg for 3 days does not appear to be more effective. The dose of prednisone can be continued at its previous level after completion of the pulse steroid. Some centers may elect to follow various oral steroid tapering protocols.



    • Antithymocyte globulin (ATG) should be considered in TCMR refractory to corticosteroid therapy (refractory can be arbitrarily defined as failure of serum creatinine to improve or deterioration of graft function despite three “daily methylprednisolone pulse”). Note that there may be a delay in serum creatinine improvement by 2 to 5 days following completion of steroid pulse. Clinical judgment is required.


  • Banff grade 1B



    • Choice of high-dose intravenous corticosteroid versus ATG such as Thymoglobulin generally requires clinical correlation. ATG is generally employed in patients with moderately severe to severe acute kidney injury (arbitrarily defined as ≥100% increase in serum creatinine) or in those who develop acute TCMR in the early posttransplant period. ATG should also be considered in those who fail to respond to pulse corticosteroid (particularly when there is rapid deterioration of renal function).


  • Banff grade 2A or 2B



    • Antithymocyte globulin (eg, Thymoglobulin)


  • Banff grade 3



    • Antithymocyte globulin


Treatment of chronic active T cell-mediated rejection



  • The optimal management of chronic active TCMR remains to be defined. Consider maximizing antimetabolite therapy as tolerated if applicable (ie, CellCept 1,000 mg twice a day or Myfortic 720 mg twice a day). Table 3-1 summarizes the pathogenesis and treatment strategies for acute and chronic TCMR (opinion based).


Treatment of acute antibody-mediated rejection

The potential mechanisms of action of various treatment modalities used in the treatment of ABMR are summarized in Table 3-2 (see also chapter 2).9,10

May 8, 2019 | Posted by in NEPHROLOGY | Comments Off on Allograft Rejection: Types and Treatment Strategies

Full access? Get Clinical Tree

Get Clinical Tree app for offline access