Abstract

Rejection and infection are relevant causes of mortality in heart recipients. We evaluated the kinetics of the maturation status of B lymphocytes and its relationship with acute cellular rejection and severe infection in heart recipients. We analyzed B-cell subsets using 4-color flow cytometry in a prospective follow-up study of 46 heart recipients. Lymphocyte subsets were evaluated at specific times before and up to 1 year after transplantation. Higher percentages of pretransplant class-switched memory B cells (CD19+CD27+IgM-IgD- >14%) were associated with a 74% decrease in the risk of severe infection [Cox regression relative hazard (RH) 0.26, 95% confidence interval (CI), 0.07-0.86; P = 0.027]. Patients with higher percentages of naïve B cells at day 7 after transplantation (CD19+CD27-IgM+IgD+ >58%) had a 91% decrease in the risk of developing acute cellular rejection (RH 0.09; 95% CI, 0.01-0.80; P = 0.02). Patients with infections showed a strong negative correlation between baseline serum B-cell-activating factor (BAFF) concentration and absolute counts of memory class-switched B cells (R = -0.81, P = 0.01). The evaluation of the immunophenotypic maturation status of B lymphocytes could prove to be a useful marker for identifying patients at risk of developing rejection or infection after heart transplantation.

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