Abstract

Introduction: Urine protein excretion is routinely measured to assess kidney allograft injury, but the diagnostic value of this measurement for kidney transplant pathology remains unclear. Here we investigated whether spot urine protein excretion in the first year following transplantation associates with allograft rejection phenotype at 1-year surveillance biopsies and de-novo occurrence of donor-specific antibodies (DSA).Patients and Methods: This prospective, observational national-cohort study included 139 non-sensitized patients who received a deceased donor kidney transplant between December 2014 and 2018. All patients received basiliximab induction and tacrolimus-based immunosuppression. Estimated protein excretion rate (ePER) was calculated monthly from spot urine protein-to-creatinine ratios. At 1-year, all recipients underwent surveillance graft biopsy and were screened for de-novo DSA. Screening-positive sera were subjected to single antigen bead (SAB) testing. The occurrence of de-novo DSA was determined based on SAB reactivity patterns using a mean fluorescence intensity threshold >1,000.Results: Among the 139 study patients, 27 patients (19%) had histologic evidence of T cell-mediated rejection (TCMR), and 9 patients (7%) had histologic evidence of antibody-mediated rejection (AMR) at 1-year surveillance biopsy. One year after transplant, 19 patients (14%) developed de-novo DSA. Compared with patients without rejection and no de-novo DSA, mixed-effects linear regression analysis showed a significant difference in slope of ePER during the first year in patients with AMR and de-novo DSA at 1-year (46, 95% CI 25–68 mg/day/1.73 m2 per month and 34, 95% CI 20–49 mg/day/1.73 m2 per month, respectively). Patients with vascular TCMR also showed a significant difference in ePER slope over time compared with patients with non-rejection findings (31, 95% CI 9–52 mg/day/1.73 m2 per month). The discriminatory power of ePER for intragraft rejection processes was better in patients with AMR (AUC 0.95, 95% CI 0.90–0.99; P < 0.001) than in those with TCMR (AUC 0.68, 95% CI 0.59–0.79; P = 0.002), with 89% sensitivity and 93% specificity for proteinuria >550 mg/day/1.73m2.Conclusions: An increase in ePER in the first year following kidney transplantation associates with AMR, vascular TCMR and de-novo DSA at 1-year and may be used as a non-invasive clinical marker of intragraft endothelial cell injury.

Highlights

  • Urine protein excretion is routinely measured to assess kidney allograft injury, but the diagnostic value of this measurement for kidney transplant pathology remains unclear

  • The results indicate that kidney allograft rejection and rejection phenotype at 1-year surveillance biopsies are associated with levels of estimated protein excretion rate (ePER) in the first year following transplantation

  • This simple diagnostic tool measured in spot urine specimens obtained longitudinally in the first-year post-transplant from patients with biopsy-confirmed tubulointerstitial T cell-mediated rejection (TCMR) and other nonrejection findings was relatively flat and distinct from the progressive increase observed in patients with antibody-mediated rejection (AMR)

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Summary

Introduction

Urine protein excretion is routinely measured to assess kidney allograft injury, but the diagnostic value of this measurement for kidney transplant pathology remains unclear. Antibody-mediated rejection (AMR) has been identified as the primary cause of allograft failure after kidney transplantation [1,2,3]. This specific disease is diagnosed by means of needle biopsy. Given that biopsy procedures are invasive, complications may occur; sampling errors may jeopardize their diagnostic value. These shortcomings have stimulated research to identify non-invasive markers that are sufficiently diagnostic for specific transplant pathologies, and that can be used as an end point in clinical studies [6]

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