AI Article Synopsis

  • Belatacept shows better long-term outcomes compared to traditional calcineurin inhibitors (CNI) for organ transplant immunosuppression, but has higher rates of early T cell-mediated rejection (TCMR), affecting its overall adoption.
  • A study analyzed kidney biopsies from 92 patients, focusing on gene expression and inflammation to understand how belatacept affects immune responses compared to CNI treatment.
  • The findings revealed a strong correlation between TCMR gene expression and inflammatory levels, highlighting a unique impact of belatacept on myeloid cells and B-cell activity during early rejections.

Article Abstract

Belatacept offers superior long-term outcome relative to calcineurin inhibitor (CNI)-based immunosuppression. However, the higher frequency of early T cell-mediated rejection (TCMR) in belatacept-treated patients hampered the widespread adoption of costimulation blockade. Here, we applied gene expression analysis and whole-slide inflammatory cell quantification to assess the impact of belatacept on intragraft immune signature. We studied formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded renal biopsies from 92 patients stratified by histopathologic diagnosis (TCMR, borderline changes, or normal) and immunosuppression regimen (belatacept, CNI). An interaction model was built to explore maintenance treatment-dependent expression level changes of immune response-related genes across diagnostic categories of normal, borderline changes, and TCMR. Ninety-one percent of genes overexpressed in TCMR showed significant correlation with whole section inflammatory load. There were 27 genes that had a positive association with belatacept treatment. These were mostly related to myeloid cells and innate immunity. Genes negatively associated with costimulation blockade (n = 14) could be linked to B-cell differentiation and proliferation. We concluded that expression levels of genes characteristic of TCMR are strongly interconnected with quantitative changes of the biopsy inflammatory load. Our results might suggest differential involvement of the innate immune system, and an altered B-cell engagement during TCMR in belatacept-treated patients relative to CNI-treated referents.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8059253PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/ctr.14084DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

inflammatory load
12
impact belatacept
8
tcmr belatacept-treated
8
belatacept-treated patients
8
costimulation blockade
8
borderline changes
8
tcmr
6
genes
5
belatacept phenotypic
4
phenotypic heterogeneity
4

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!