Abstract

Recent years have seen advances in the early detection of cardiac graft rejection. We review the possibilities offered by tissue Doppler imaging and speckle tracking echocardiography, cardiac magnetic resonance, cardiac computed tomography, single positron emission tomography, gene expression profiling, and quantitation of donor-derived cell-free DNA, and microRNAs. Noninvasive monitoring of acute and chronic rejection after cardiac transplantation is an unmet need and remains a challenge. Imaging techniques and peripheral blood biomarkers are the most commonly used approaches, and in recent years there has been great progress. Gene expression profiling seems to be useful for ruling out the presence of a moderate to severe acute cellular rejection in stable, low-risk patients. Newer monitoring tools, like donor-derived cell-free DNA or microRNA, seem to be promising for individualizing immunosuppressive therapies and better understanding the mechanisms of rejection.

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