Abstract

In seventeen patients the result of the histological study of 153 endomyocardial biopsies (EMB) was compared with the ELISA titer of anti-human skeletal muscle glycolipid antibodies (AGA) present in serum samples collected simultaneously with the EMB procedure during the first four months following cardiac transplantation. The glycolipids were extracted from the quadriceps femoralis of blood group O patients. In the serum samples corresponding to the histological rejection grades with myocyte necrosis (greater than or equal to 2, International Society for Heart and Lung Transplantation grading) the AGA titer was significantly higher (P<0.005) than in the less severe rejection grades. The follow-up in each patient showed that the AGA titer raised in the serum samples collected immediately after, before, or coincidentally with a histological diagnosis of rejection grade 2 or 3A. In only one rejection grade 3A case was a false-negative result observed. Determination of the cut-off of the AGA level versus rejection grades 2 and 3A was determined by a relative-operating characteristic curve. An optical density (OD) of 0.040 showed maximum efficiency with sensitivity 53% and specificity 79%. Four patients who had AGA with an OD above 0.040 at the time of transplant had a significantly higher number of rejection grade 2 and 3A episodes than eleven patients with low pre-transplant AGA titers (P<0.05). These results indicate that search of anti-skeletal muscle glycolipid antibodies may represent a useful noninvasive method for monitoring heart rejection, and suggest that its investigation prior transplant may be a predictor of the number of grades 2 and 3A rejection episodes.

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