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Early changes in scores of chronic damage on transplant kidney protocol biopsies reflect donor characteristics, but not future graft function

Early changes in scores of chronic damage on transplant kidney protocol biopsies reflect donor characteristics, but not future graft function
Early changes in scores of chronic damage on transplant kidney protocol biopsies reflect donor characteristics, but not future graft function
The amount of irreversible injury on renal allograft biopsy predicts function, but little is known about the early evolution of this damage. In a single-center cohort, we examined the relationship between donor-, recipient-, and transplantation-associated factors and change in a morphometric index of chronic damage (ICD) between protocol biopsies performed at implantation and at 2–3 months. We then investigated whether early delta ICD predicted subsequent biochemical outcomes. We found little evidence to support differences between the study group, who had undergone serial biopsies, and a contemporaneous control group, who had not. In allografts with serial biopsies (n = 162), there was an increase in ICD between implantation (median: 2%, IQR:0–8) and 2–3 months post-transplant (median 8% IQR:4–15; p < 0.0001). Donation from younger or live donors was independently associated with smaller early post-transplant increases in ICD. There was no evidence for a difference in delta ICD between donation after cardiac death vs. donation after brain death, nor association with length of cold ischemia. After adjustment for GFR at the time of the second biopsy, delta ICD after three months did not predict allograft function at one yr. These findings suggest that graft damage develops shortly after transplantation and reflects donor factors, but does not predict future biochemical outcomes.

Keywords: chronic allograft injury, chronic damage index, digital image analysis, protocol biopsy, renal transplantation
Caplin, B
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Veighey, K
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Mahenderan, A
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Manook, M
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Henry, J
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Nitsch, Dorothea
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Harber, M
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Dupont, P
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Wheeler, DC
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Jones, G
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Fernando, B
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Howie, AJ
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Veitch, Peter J.
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Caplin, B
ec54a7fa-df87-4b8c-8ceb-05f22bc6138e
Veighey, K
2adbaf5c-141a-44bd-a7eb-faf14e0ca251
Mahenderan, A
65439dfc-0ca7-4936-9205-c898b1d6ec4a
Manook, M
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Henry, J
ee2d3631-bd5a-422e-b929-7b813b9ce1bf
Nitsch, Dorothea
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Harber, M
e9cf22ac-97bc-431a-a09b-74f95c35460d
Dupont, P
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Wheeler, DC
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Jones, G
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Fernando, B
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Howie, AJ
bc6d17ea-6bba-434b-98c6-96417eba4c2c
Veitch, Peter J.
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Caplin, B, Veighey, K, Mahenderan, A, Manook, M, Henry, J, Nitsch, Dorothea, Harber, M, Dupont, P, Wheeler, DC, Jones, G, Fernando, B, Howie, AJ and Veitch, Peter J. (2013) Early changes in scores of chronic damage on transplant kidney protocol biopsies reflect donor characteristics, but not future graft function. Clinical Transplantation. (doi:10.1111/ctr.12251).

Record type: Article

Abstract

The amount of irreversible injury on renal allograft biopsy predicts function, but little is known about the early evolution of this damage. In a single-center cohort, we examined the relationship between donor-, recipient-, and transplantation-associated factors and change in a morphometric index of chronic damage (ICD) between protocol biopsies performed at implantation and at 2–3 months. We then investigated whether early delta ICD predicted subsequent biochemical outcomes. We found little evidence to support differences between the study group, who had undergone serial biopsies, and a contemporaneous control group, who had not. In allografts with serial biopsies (n = 162), there was an increase in ICD between implantation (median: 2%, IQR:0–8) and 2–3 months post-transplant (median 8% IQR:4–15; p < 0.0001). Donation from younger or live donors was independently associated with smaller early post-transplant increases in ICD. There was no evidence for a difference in delta ICD between donation after cardiac death vs. donation after brain death, nor association with length of cold ischemia. After adjustment for GFR at the time of the second biopsy, delta ICD after three months did not predict allograft function at one yr. These findings suggest that graft damage develops shortly after transplantation and reflects donor factors, but does not predict future biochemical outcomes.

Keywords: chronic allograft injury, chronic damage index, digital image analysis, protocol biopsy, renal transplantation

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Clinical Transplantation - 2013 - Caplin - Early changes in scores of chronic damage on transplant kidney protocol biopsies - Version of Record
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Accepted/In Press date: 27 August 2013
Published date: October 2013

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 495288
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/495288
PURE UUID: 1de6003c-6e93-45df-9e2d-62d9e36bf27b
ORCID for K Veighey: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-4903-1847

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Date deposited: 06 Nov 2024 17:56
Last modified: 07 Nov 2024 02:54

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Contributors

Author: B Caplin
Author: K Veighey ORCID iD
Author: A Mahenderan
Author: M Manook
Author: J Henry
Author: Dorothea Nitsch
Author: M Harber
Author: P Dupont
Author: DC Wheeler
Author: G Jones
Author: B Fernando
Author: AJ Howie
Author: Peter J. Veitch

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