Data-driven Derivation and Validation of Novel Phenotypes for Acute Kidney Transplant Rejection using Semi-supervised Clustering

Author:

Vaulet Thibaut,Divard GillianORCID,Thaunat Olivier,Lerut Evelyne,Senev AleksandarORCID,Aubert OlivierORCID,Van Loon ElisabetORCID,Callemeyn JasperORCID,Emonds Marie-Paule,Van Craenenbroeck Amaryllis,De Vusser Katrien,Sprangers Ben,Rabeyrin Maud,Dubois Valérie,Kuypers Dirk,De Vos Maarten,Loupy AlexandreORCID,De Moor Bart,Naesens MaartenORCID

Abstract

BackgroundOver the past decades, an international group of experts iteratively developed a consensus classification of kidney transplant rejection phenotypes, known as the Banff classification. Data-driven clustering of kidney transplant histologic data could simplify the complex and discretionary rules of the Banff classification, while improving the association with graft failure.MethodsThe data consisted of a training set of 3510 kidney-transplant biopsies from an observational cohort of 936 recipients. Independent validation of the results was performed on an external set of 3835 biopsies from 1989 patients. On the basis of acute histologic lesion scores and the presence of donor-specific HLA antibodies, stable clustering was achieved on the basis of a consensus of 400 different clustering partitions. Additional information on kidney-transplant failure was introduced with a weighted Euclidean distance.ResultsBased on the proportion of ambiguous clustering, six clinically meaningful cluster phenotypes were identified. There was significant overlap with the existing Banff classification (adjusted rand index, 0.48). However, the data-driven approach eliminated intermediate and mixed phenotypes and created acute rejection clusters that are each significantly associated with graft failure. Finally, a novel visualization tool presents disease phenotypes and severity in a continuous manner, as a complement to the discrete clusters.ConclusionsA semisupervised clustering approach for the identification of clinically meaningful novel phenotypes of kidney transplant rejection has been developed and validated. The approach has the potential to offer a more quantitative evaluation of rejection subtypes and severity, especially in situations in which the current histologic categorization is ambiguous.

Funder

The Research Foundation Flanders

KU Leuven

Agence Nationale pour la Recherche

Fondation pour la Recherche médicale

Industrial Research Fund

Flemish Government

VLAIO

Industrial Projects

European Research Council

Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale

Fondation Bettencourt Schueller

Fondation pour la Recherche Médicale

Publisher

American Society of Nephrology (ASN)

Subject

Nephrology,General Medicine

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