Predicting Cellular Rejection With a Cell-Based Assay: Preclinical Evaluation in Children.

2017 
Allospecific CD154+T-cytotoxic memory cells (CD154+TcM) predict acute cellular rejection after liver transplantation (LTx) or intestine transplantation (ITx) in small cohorts of children and can enhance immunosuppression management, but await validation and clinical implementation.To establish safety and probable benefit, CD154+TcM were measured in cryopreserved samples from 214 children younger than 21 years (National Clinical Trial 1163578). Training set samples (n = 158) were tested with research-grade reagents and 122 independent validation set samples were tested with current good manufacturing practices-manufactured reagents after assay standardization and reproducibility testing. Recipient CD154+TcM induced by stimulation with donor cells were expressed as a fraction of those induced by HLA nonidentical cells in parallel cultures. The resulting immunoreactivity index (IR) if greater than 1 implies increased rejection-risk.Training and validation set subjects were demographically similar. Mean coefficient of test variation was less than 10% under several conditions. Logistic regression incorporating several confounding variables identified separate pretransplant and posttransplant IR thresholds for prediction of rejection in the respective training set samples. An IR of 1.1 or greater in posttransplant training samples and IR of 1.23 or greater in pretransplant training samples predicted LTx or ITx rejection in corresponding validation set samples in the 60-day postsampling period with sensitivity, specificity, positive, and negative predictive values of 84%, 80%, 64%, and 92%, respectively (area under the receiver operator characteristic curve, 0.792), and 57%, 89%, 78%, and 74%, respectively (area under the receiver operator characteristic curve, 0.848). No adverse events were encountered due to phlebotomy.Allospecific CD154+T-cytotoxic memory cells predict acute cellular rejection after LTx or ITx in children. Adjunctive use can enhance clinical outcomes.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    22
    References
    19
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []