Abstract

Diffuse C4d deposition in peritubular capillaries is a well-recognized marker of antibody-mediated rejection. The significance of staining patterns that are focal or affect non-peritubular capillary compartments is less well defined. Paired frozen section and paraffin-embedded tissue stains were performed in 52 kidney allograft biopsies, and correlated with clinicopathologic parameters. Diffuse peritubular capillary C4d deposits were more often seen in frozen sections (22/52, 43% frozen tissue vs 10/52, 19% paraffin-embedded tissue), whereas focal staining was observed more frequently within paraffin sections (13/52, 25% paraffin-embedded tissue vs 7/52, 14% frozen tissue). In biopsies taken from patients with a history of donor-specific antibodies, diffuse, focal and negative peritubular capillary C4d staining patterns were seen in 11/14 (79%), 1/14 (7%) and 2/14 (14%) of frozen biopsies vs 5/14 (36%), 6/14 (43%) and 3/14 (21%) of paraffin-embedded biopsies. Transplant glomerulopathy score in paraffin-embedded biopsies was higher in specimens with vs without glomerular basement membrane C4d staining (1.5±0.8 vs 1.0±0.6, P=0.03). Tubular basement membrane staining was present in 4% paraffin-embedded and 48% frozen specimens independent of tubular atrophy. Arteriolar hyalinosis score in paraffin-embedded specimens was higher in biopsies with vs those without arteriolar C4d deposits (1.3±0.9 vs 0.9±0.8, P=0.04). Arterial staining was unrelated to the degree of intimal thickening. In conclusion, peritubular capillary deposits correlate well with circulating donor-specific antibody. For paraffin-embedded tissue, combining the results of focal and diffuse staining allows a diagnostic sensitivity comparable to diffuse staining in frozen tissue. Finally, C4d deposits preferentially in lesions of chronic transplant glomerulopathy and arteriolar hyalinosis.

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