Donor-Derived Cell Free DNA: Is It All the Same?

Kidney360

Dallas Nephrology Associates, Dallas, Texas.

Published: October 2020

Background: Clinical utility of donor-derived, cellfree DNA (dd-cfDNA) in transplantation has been extensively reviewed, supporting its use as a surveillance tool for the early and accurate detection of allograft injury. Yet studies comparing different assay methods have been lacking.

Methods: Paired sampling of commercially available dd-cfDNA (AlloSure and Prospera) was compared and examined against histology and manufacturer guidance. A total of 76 patients were prospectively assessed, with 11 biopsy sample-proven rejections (antibody-mediated rejection, =2; T cell-mediated rejection, =9).

Results: Prospera demonstrated larger measurements of dd-cfDNA in comparison with AlloSure, but this was NS (=0.12). At current manufacturer recommended diagnostic cutoffs, there was no significant difference in sensitivity, specificity, negative predictive value, or positive predictive value of AlloSure versus Prospera in detecting rejection. AlloSure demonstrated a significantly shorter turnaround time (=0.01) from blood draw to patient result.

Conclusions: Although dd-cfDNAs are similar, they are not the same. Extensive evidence for dd-cfDNA interpretation remains the key to building clinical utility when considering clinical implementation, and remaining consistent to a single platform is important when creating data comparisons.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8815488PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.34067/KID.0003512020DOI Listing

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