Abstract
Antibody-mediated rejection (AMR) of the cardiac allograft is a poorly defined and challenging diagnosis for transplant recipients and their clinicians. Although even its very existence in heart transplantation was debated until relatively recently, improved immunopathologic and serological techniques to detect myocardial capillary complement deposition and circulating anti-HLA (human leukocyte antigen) antibodies have led to the detection of a spectrum of newly uncovered immunologic changes that characterize AMR. The earliest standardized clinical and pathological criteria for the diagnosis of AMR in heart transplantation became available in 2004, the result of a task force assembled by the International Society for Heart and Lung Transplantation (ISHLT). In 2006, the criteria were refined by the ISHLT Immunopathology Task Force (Table 1). These revisions provide 4 categories of diagnostic criteria: clinical, histopathologic, immunopathologic, and serological assessment.1 Despite these published criteria, currently >50% of heart transplant centers make the diagnosis of AMR based on cardiac dysfunction and the lack of cellular infiltrates on the heart biopsy (preconference survey included in the ISHLT consensus article).2 More recently, the ISHLT Consensus Conference on AMR has redefined the pathological diagnosis of AMR.3 The 2013 ISHLT “Working Formulation for the Standardization of Nomenclature in the Pathologic Diagnosis of Antibody-Mediated Rejection in Heart Transplantation” was published in December 2013. This document provided an update to the 2010 consensus conference.4 It is anticipated that this update to the definition of AMR will reduce variations in the diagnosis of AMR, providing a platform for the development of standardized therapies. The goal of the present scientific statement is to provide the heart transplant professional with an overview of the current status of the diagnosis and treatment of AMR in the cardiac allograft based on recent consensus conferences and the published literature. We include recommendations to facilitate evolving standardization and strategies …
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