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1.
Pediatr Transplant ; 28(3): e14744, 2024 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38566341

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: There is limited data in the literature about pediatric kidney transplant (KT) following gut transplant (GT). The purpose of this study is to highlight the technical challenges and outcomes of KT in pediatric gut recipients who developed kidney failure (KF). METHODS: A retrospective single-center study of pediatric GT recipients from January 2000 to December 2019 was performed. In total, 14 (7%) out of 206 pediatric GT recipients developed KF and were listed for KT. Ten patients underwent kidney after gut transplant (KAGT), three patients underwent simultaneous kidney and re-do gut transplant (SKAGT), and one patient died on the KT waitlist. RESULTS: 1-, 5-, and 10-year kidney graft survival was 100%, 91%, and 78%, respectively. 1-, 5-, and 10-year GT graft survival was 100%, 77%, and 77%, respectively. 1-, 5-, and 10-year patient survival was 100%, 91%, and 91%, respectively. CONCLUSION: Despite the technical complexity, KAGT and SKAGT for pediatric GT recipients that develop KF can be performed with favorable outcomes.


Subject(s)
Kidney Transplantation , Humans , Child , Retrospective Studies , Transplant Recipients , Graft Survival
2.
Transplant Direct ; 10(3): e1589, 2024 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38414976

ABSTRACT

Background: Enhanced B-cell presentation of donor alloantigen relative to presentation of HLA-mismatched reference alloantigen is associated with acute cellular rejection (ACR), when expressed as a ratio called the antigen presenting index (API) in an exploratory cohort of liver and intestine transplant (LT and IT) recipients. Methods: To test clinical performance, we measured the API using the previously described 6-h assay in 84 LT and 54 IT recipients with median age 3.3 y (0.05-23.96). Recipients experiencing ACR within 60 d after testing were termed rejectors. Results: We first confirmed that B-cell uptake and presentation of alloantigen induced and thus reflected the alloresponse of T-helper cells, which were incubated without and with cytochalasin and primaquine to inhibit antigen uptake and presentation, respectively. Transplant recipients included 76 males and 62 females. Rejectors were tested at median 3.6 d before diagnosis. The API was higher among rejectors compared with nonrejectors (2.2 ±â€…0.2 versus 0.6 ±â€…0.04, P value = 1.7E-09). In logistic regression and receiver-operating-characteristic analysis, API ≥1.1 achieved sensitivity, specificity, and positive and negative predictive values for predicting ACR in 99 training set samples. Corresponding metrics ranged from 80% to 88% in 32 independent posttransplant samples, and 73% to 100% in 20 independent pretransplant samples. In time-to-event analysis, API ≥1.1 predicted higher incidence of late donor-specific anti-HLA antibodies after API measurements in LT recipients (P = 0.011) and graft loss in IT recipients (P = 0.008), compared with recipients with API <1.1, respectively. Conclusions: Enhanced donor antigen presentation by circulating B cells predicts rejection after liver or intestine transplantation as well as higher incidence of DSA and graft loss late after transplantation.

3.
J Surg Res (Houst) ; 6(4): 348-363, 2023.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38606317

ABSTRACT

Assessment of cellular immunity to the SARS-CoV-2 coronavirus is of great interest in chronically immunosuppressed transplant recipients (Tr), who are predisposed to infections and vaccination failures. We evaluated CD154-expressing T-cells induced by spike (S) antigenic peptides in 204 subjects-103 COVID-19 patients and 101 healthy unexposed subjects. S-reactive CD154+T-cell frequencies were a) higher in 42 healthy unexposed Tr who were sampled pre-pandemic, compared with healthy NT (p=0.02), b) lower in Tr COVID-19 patients compared with healthy Tr (p<0.0001) and were accompanied by lower S-reactive B-cell frequencies (p<0.05), c) lower in Tr with severe COVID-19 (p<0.0001), or COVID-19 requiring hospitalization (p<0.05), compared with healthy Tr. Among Tr with COVID-19, cytomegalovirus co-infection occurred in 34%; further, incidence of anti-receptor-binding-domain IgG (p=0.011) was lower compared with NT COVID-19 patients. Healthy unexposed Tr exhibit pre-existing T-cell immunity to SARS-CoV-2. COVID-19 impairs anti-S T-cell and antibody and predisposes to CMV co-infection in transplant recipients.

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