Impact of HLA Mismatching on Early Subclinical Inflammation in Low-Immunological-Risk Kidney Transplant Recipients

Author:

Hernández Domingo,Vázquez Teresa,Alonso-Titos Juana,León Myriam,Caballero Abelardo,Cobo María Angeles,Sola Eugenia,López VerónicaORCID,Ruiz-Esteban Pedro,Cruzado Josep María,Sellarés Joana,Moreso FrancescORCID,Manonelles AnnaORCID,Torio Alberto,Cabello Mercedes,Delgado-Burgos Juan,Casas Cristina,Gutiérrez Elena,Jironda Cristina,Kanter Julia,Serón DanielORCID,Torres Armando

Abstract

The impact of human leukocyte antigen (HLA)-mismatching on the early appearance of subclinical inflammation (SCI) in low-immunological-risk kidney transplant (KT) recipients is undetermined. We aimed to assess whether HLA-mismatching (A-B-C-DR-DQ) is a risk factor for early SCI. As part of a clinical trial (Clinicaltrials.gov, number NCT02284464), a total of 105 low-immunological-risk KT patients underwent a protocol biopsy on the third month post-KT. As a result, 54 presented SCI, showing a greater number of total HLA-mismatches (p = 0.008) and worse allograft function compared with the no inflammation group (48.5 ± 13.6 vs. 60 ± 23.4 mL/min; p = 0.003). Multiple logistic regression showed that the only risk factor associated with SCI was the total HLA-mismatch score (OR 1.32, 95%CI 1.06–1.64, p = 0.013) or class II HLA mismatching (OR 1.51; 95%CI 1.04–2.19, p = 0.032) after adjusting for confounder variables (recipient age, delayed graft function, transfusion prior KT, and tacrolimus levels). The ROC curve illustrated that the HLA mismatching of six antigens was the optimal value in terms of sensitivity and specificity for predicting the SCI. Finally, a significantly higher proportion of SCI was seen in patients with >6 vs. ≤6 HLA-mismatches (62.3 vs. 37.7%; p = 0.008). HLA compatibility is an independent risk factor associated with early SCI. Thus, transplant physicians should perhaps be more aware of HLA mismatching to reduce these early harmful lesions.

Funder

Instituto de Salud Carlos III

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

General Medicine

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