We read with great interest the award winning article of Torrealba et al. (1) demonstrating the association between circulating donor-specific antibodies (DSA) and C4d+ interacinar staining in pancreas allograft biopsies (PcABx). This study is important because pancreatic antibody-mediated allograft rejection (AMR) has been under recognized and a systematic approach to its clinical and pathological diagnosis is needed. In kidney transplants, circulating DSA and biopsy C4d+ are essential for a histological diagnosis of acute AMR, provided the biopsy also shows morphologica evidence of acute tissue injury (capillary or glomerular inflammation, microthrombi, or acute tubular necrosis) (2). Furthermore, C4d+ in the absence of injury falls into a descriptive category short of AMR (2). On the basis of more limited evidence, guidelines were proposed to diagnose AMR in PcABx. This categorization also relies on a combination of elements (DSA+, C4d+, graft dysfunction; 3). Torrealba et al. provide strong support for the systematic use of C4d stains in PcATx. Their study identifies interacinar C4d+ as the most specific pattern of positivity with respect to AMR. In our view, it would be useful to emphasize that the “interacinar” pattern may be partially or completely lost when there is ongoing-chronic AMR (“active chronic AMR”) leading to extensive fibrosis. In those cases, C4d interacinar staining may remain in the atrophic exocrine remnants but it may be seen also in capillary walled vessels throughout the fibrotic parenchyma (4). Also, larger vessel (rather than interacinar staining) for complement (including C4d and immunoglobulin components) is seen in the wall of necrotic arteries and veins in the rare but cataclysmic cases of “accelerated AMR” typically presenting with graft thrombosis (3). Also, in our patient population, interacinar C4d+ identifies patients with significant amounts of circulating DSA and correlates with AMR (5), but we have been puzzled by the various clinical settings in which C4d+ is encountered. More specifically, over a period of 12 months (2007), only 2 of 4 SPK patients with unequivocal interacinar C4d+ had typical acute AMR (seen in both grafts). The third patient had progressive failure of both kidney and pancreas, and renal biopsies showed typical active chronic AMR. Interestingly, in the pancreas, C4d+ was associated with features of recurrent diabetes mellitus: preserved acinar and endocrine components but complete loss of beta cells with preservation of alpha cells. This case raises important questions about possible mechanisms of graft injury in AMR (i.e. islet-beta cell microvascular injury) and the possible interplay between allo- and autoimmu nity. Finally, in the fourth patient, PcATx done 3 months apart during the eighth year posttransplantation showed diffuse C4d+ (and circulating DSA) but the patient continues to be euglycemic after 12 additional months of follow-up (ninth year posttransplantation) without any treatment of AMR. Similar to the kidney, delineation of a set of morphological features of tissue injury in addition to C4d+ would be useful to further understand the pathophysiology of AMR. Concurrent cell-mediated rejection (seen in 18 of 27 cases in the study of Torrealba et al.) and nonspecific (secondary) tissue inflammation may be confounding factors of AMR. In cases with “pure” acute AMR (i.e. lacking T-cell infiltrates), including the two cases described earlier, we have typically found a disproportionate amount of acinar cell injury (Fig. 1). This ranges from scattered apoptotic bodies within the acini, to massive cytoplasmic vacuolization, swelling and cell drop-out that may be attributed to the microvascular injury associated with AMR. In the more severe cases, capillary dilatation (congestion) and interacinar “capillaritis” (mononuclear, neutrophilic, or mixed), as described by Torrealba et al., are also noted (Fig. 1).FIGURE 1.: Pancreas' biopsy in a patient with acute antibody-mediated allograft rejection 2 weeks posttransplantation. (A) Marked acinar cell injury including cytoplasmic swelling and vacuolization. There are scattered apoptotic cells and apoptotic nuclear fragments (arrows). The cell injury is disproportionate to the recognizable inflammatory infiltrates (CD3 stain showed rare T cells). There were no features of cell-mediated rejection. The interacinar capillaries are congested. (B) C4d stain outlines interacinar capillaries. (C) Macrophage stain (CD68) demonstrates that interacinar capillaries are engorged with macrophages in a manner similar to the “capillaritis” described in peritubular capillaries in renal acute antibody-mediated allograft rejection.Increased recognition of AMR in PcABx raises issues that overlap with those in other solid organ transplants, but also organ-specific which need to be addressed independently. Raghava B. Munivenkatappa Benjamin Philosophe John C. Papadimitriou Cinthia B. Drachenberg Division of Transplantation Departments of Surgery and Pathology Baltimore, MD