Abstract

Although acute rejection is a frequent occurrence after transplantation, the clinical behavior and pathological manifestations of untreated mild acute cellular rejection in clinically stable lung allograft recipients is poorly defined. Sixteen patients were identified who had asymptomatic mild acute rejection that was untreated but followed by subsequent pulmonary function tests and repeat transbronchial biopsy. Six patients had spontaneous resolution of their infiltrates; the condition of 10 patients worsened as observed from their biopsies or function studies. Those who worsened had more episodes of acute rejection per patient before the A2 biopsy (2.0 vs 1.3), and 50% developed bronchiolitis obliterans compared with 16% in the spontaneously regressing group. Pathological evaluation showed that patients with persistent or worsening untreated A2 rejection tended to have more large and small airway inflammation, larger numbers of eosinophils and plasma cells in their biopsies, and airway and airspace granulation tissue. These variables may be used to help determine which low grade lung rejection episodes should receive adjunctive immunosuppressive therapy.

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