38 resultados para C4D
Resumo:
This study aimed at investigating associations between monocytes/ macrophages (Mo) infiltration and three important criteria associated with acute antibody-mediated rejection: C4d staining, microcirculation injury, and graft survival time. By quantitative analysis, Mo were counted in peritubular capillaries and in the interstitial compartment (peritubular/interstitial Mo), and they were also identified in glomeruli (glomerular Mo). The study included 47 patients who received renal allograft between 1991 and 2009. Capillaritis and glomerulitis were classified by the Banff scoring system, and C4d and Mo were analyzed by immunohistochemistry. In the quantitative analysis, the mean values of 50 Mo per 10 high-power fields (HPF) and 4 Mo per glomerulus were used as cut-off points for the peritubular/interstitial and glomerular compartments, respectively. Positive C4d cases were associated with the groups of biopsies with a mean value ≥50 Mo per 10 HPF (p = 0.01) and ≥4 Mo per glomerulus (p = 0.02). The group with a mean value ≥4 Mo per glomerulus also showed association with the presence of glomerulitis (p = 0.02). Peritubular/ interstitial Mo did not associate with glomerulitis. Capillaritis did not show association with peritubular/interstitial or glomerular Mo. As regards graft survival, the infiltration of Mo in glomeruli interfered with allograft survival (p = 0.01). The group with a mean value of ≥4 glomerular Mo presented worse survival at the time of the 1-year follow-up. According to the literature, our data showed that infiltration of mononuclear cells was associated with C4d staining, microcirculation injury, and glomerulitis, in particular, and that glomerular macrophages could influence renal allograft survival. Copyright © 2013 Informa Healthcare USA, Inc.
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Glomerulitis and peritubular capillaritis have been recognized as important lesions in acute renal rejection (AR). We studied glomerulitis and peritubular capillaritis in AR by 2 methods and investigated associations with C4d, type/grade of AR, and allograft survival time. Glomerulitis was measured according to Banff scores (glomerulitis by Banff Method [gBM]) and by counting the number of intraglomerular inflammatory cells (glomerulitis by Quantitative Method [gQM]). Capillaritis was classified by the Banff scoring system (peritubular capillaritis by Banff Method [ptcBM]) and by counting the number of cells in peritubular capillaries in 10 high-power fields (hpf; peritubular capillaritis by Quantitative Method [ptcQM]). These quantitative analyses were performed in an attempt to improve our understanding of the role played by glomerulitis and capillaritis in AR. The g0 + g1 group (gBM) associated with negative C4d (P = .02). In peritubular capillaritis, a larger number of cells per 10 hpf in peritubular capillaries (ptcQM) were observed in positive C4d cases (P = .03). The group g2 + g3 (gBM) correlated with graft loss (P = .01). Peritubular capillaritis was not significantly related to graft survival time. Our study showed that the Banff scoring system is the best method to study glomerulitis and observed that the evaluation of capillaritis in routine biopsies is difficult and additional studies are required for a better understanding of its meaning in AR biopsy specimens of renal allografts.
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INTRODUCTION. Late chronic allograft disfunction (CAD) is one of the more concerning issues in the management of patients (pts) with renal transplant (tx). Humoral immune response seems to play an important role in CAD pathogenesis. AIM OF THE STUDY. To identify the causes of late chronic allograft disfunction. METHODS. This study (march 2004-august 2011) enrolled pts who underwent renal biopsy (BR) because of CAD (increase of creatininemia (s-Cr) >30% and/or proteinuria >1g/day at least one year after tx). BR were classified according to 1997/2005 Banff classification. Histological evaluation of C4d (positive if >25%), glomerulitis, tubulitis, intimal arteritis, atrophy/fibrosis and arteriolar-hyalinosis were performed. Ab anti-HLA research at BR was an inclusion criteria. Pts were divided into two groups: with or without transplant glomerulopathy (CTG). RESULTS. Evaluated BR: 93/109. BR indication: impaired s-Cr (52/93), proteinuria (23/93), both (18/93). Time Tx-BR: 7.4±6.3 yrs; s-Cr at BR: 2.7±1.4 mg/dl. CTG group(n=49) not-CTG group(n=44) p Time tx-BR (yrs) 9.3±6.7 5.3±5.2 0.002 Follow-up post-BR (yrs) 2.7±1.8 4.1±1.4 0.0001 s-Cr at BR (mg/dl) 2.9±1.3 2.4±1.5 NS Rate (%) of pts: Proteinuria at BR 61% 25% 0.0004 C4d+ 84% 25% <0.0001 Ab anti-HLA+ 71% 30% 0.0001 C4d+ and/or Ab antiHLA 92% 43% 0.0001 Glomerulitis 76% 16% <0.0001 Tubulitis 6% 32% 0.0014 Intimal arteritis 18% 0% 0.002 Arteriolar hyalinosis 65% 50% NS Atrophy/fibrosis 80% 77% NS Graft survival 45% 86% 0.00005 Histological Diagnosis: CTG group (n=49:Chronic rejection 94%;IgA recurrence + humoral activity 4%;IIA acute rejection + humoral activity 2%. Not-CTG group (n=44: GN recurrence 27%;IF/TA 23%; acute rejection 23%;BKV nephritis 9%; mild not specific alterations 18%. CONCLUSIONS: CTG is the morphological lesion mainly related to CAD. In the 92% of the cases it is associated with markers of immunological activity. It causes graft failure within five years after diagnosis in 55% of pts.
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Background Activation of the endothelium, complement activation and generation of cytokines are known events during ischemia-reperfusion (I/R) that mediate tissue injury. Our aim was to elucidate their respective participation at the onset of the reperfusion phase. Tourniquet application in hand surgery causes short-term ischemia, followed by reperfusion and was therefore used as the model in this study. Methods Ten patients were included in the study after obtaining informed consent. A tourniquet was placed on the upper arm and inflated to 250 mmHg for 116 ± 16 min, during which the surgery was performed. Venous blood and tissue samples from the surgical area were taken at baseline as well as 0, 2, and 10 min after reperfusion and analyzed for the following parameters: Endothelial integrity and/or activation were analyzed by measuring heparan sulfate and syndecan-1 in serum, and vWF, heparan sulfate proteoglycan as well as CD31on tissue. Complement activation was determined by C3a and C4d levels in plasma, levels of C1-inhibitor in serum, and IgG, IgM, C3b/c, and C4b/c deposition on tissue. Cytokines and growth factors IL-5, IL-6, IL-7, IL-8, IL-10, IL-17, G-CSF, GM-CSF, MCP-1, TNFα, VEGF, and PDGF bb were measured in the serum. Finally, CK-MM levels were determined in plasma as a measure for muscle necrosis. Results Markers for endothelial activation and/or integrity as well as complement activation showed no significant changes until 10 min reperfusion. Among the measured cytokines, IL-6, IL-7, IL-17, TNFα, GM-CSF, VEGF, and PDGF bb were significantly increased at 10 min reperfusion with respect to baseline. CK-MM showed a rise from baseline at the onset of reperfusion (p < 0.001) and dropped again at 2 min (p < 0.01) reperfusion, suggesting ischemic muscle damage. Conclusions In this clinical model of I/R injury no damage to the endothelium, antibody deposition or complement activation were observed during early reperfusion. However, an increase of pro-inflammatory cytokines and growth factors was shown, suggesting a contribution of these molecules in the early stages of I/R injury.
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BACKGROUND: Pretransplant anti-HLA donor-specific antibodies (DSA) are recognized as a risk factor for acute antibody-mediated rejection (AMR) in kidney transplantation. The predictive value of C4d-fixing capability by DSA or of IgG DSA subclasses for acute AMR in the pretransplant setting has been recently studied. In addition DSA strength assessed by mean fluorescence intensity (MFI) may improve risk stratification. We aimed to analyze the relevance of preformed DSA and of DSA MFI values. METHODS: 280 consecutive patients with negative complement-dependent cytotoxicity crossmatches received a kidney transplant between 01/2008 and 03/2014. Sera were screened for the presence of DSA with a solid-phase assays on a Luminex flow analyzer, and the results were correlated with biopsy-proven acute AMR in the first year and survival. RESULTS: Pretransplant anti-HLA antibodies were present in 72 patients (25.7%) and 24 (8.6%) had DSA. There were 46 (16.4%) acute rejection episodes, 32 (11.4%) being cellular and 14 (5.0%) AMR. The incidence of acute AMR was higher in patients with pretransplant DSA (41.7%) than in those without (1.6%) (p<0.001). The median cumulative MFI (cMFI) of the group DSA+/AMR+ was 5680 vs 2208 in DSA+/AMR- (p=0.058). With univariate logistic regression a threshold value of 5280 cMFI was predictive for acute AMR. DSA cMFI's ability to predict AMR was also explored by ROC analysis. AUC was 0.728 and the best threshold was a cMFI of 4340. Importantly pretransplant DSA>5280 cMFI had a detrimental effect on 5-year graft survival. CONCLUSIONS: Preformed DSA cMFI values were clinically-relevant for the prediction of acute AMR and graft survival in kidney transplantation. A threshold of 4300-5300 cMFI was a significant outcome predictor.
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This novel capillary electrophoresis microchip, or also known as μTAS (micro total analysis system) was designed to separate complex aqueous based compounds, similar to commercial CE & microchip (capillary electrophoresis) systems, but more compact. This system can be potentially used for mobile/portable chemical analysis equipment. Un-doped silicon wafer & ultra-thin borofloat glass (Pyrex) wafers have been used to fabricate the device. Double-L injection feature, micro pillars column, bypass separation channel & hybrid- referenced C4D electrodes were designed to achieve a high SNR (signal to noise ratio), easy- separation, for a durable and reusable μTAS for CE use.
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Antecedentes: El trasplante renal es la mejor alternativa terapéutica para la enfermedad renal crónica terminal. Los medicamentos inmunosupresores previenen el rechazo. El rechazo mediado por anticuerpos es frecuente y disminuye la función y duración del injerto. Objetivo: Evaluar sistemáticamente la evidencia disponible relacionada con la eficacia y seguridad del tratamiento para el rechazo mediado por anticuerpos en pacientes trasplantados renales. Metodologia: Revisión sistemática en bases de datos MEDLINE, EMBASE, Scopus y Biblioteca virtual de la salud. Literatura gris google scholar, google academico, www.clinicaltrialsregister.eu, and https://clinicaltrials.gov/. Búsqueda manual referencias artículos pre-seleccionados así como de revisiones previamente publicadas. Se siguieron las recomendacioes guia PRISMA para la identificacion de artículos potenciales, tamizaje y selección teniendo en cuenta los criterios de inclusion. Extracción datos de acuerdo a las variables, revisión calidad de los artículos elegidos utilizando evaluación riesgo de segos de Cochrane. Resultados: Se seleccionaron 9 ensayos clínicos publicados entre 1980 y 2016, incluyeron 222 pacientes (113 brazo de intervención y 109 en el control), seguimiento promedio 16 meses. Intervenciones evaluadas plasmaféresis, inmunoadsorción y rituximab. Hubo una amplia heterogeneidad en la definición de criterios de inclusión, criterios diagnósticos de rechazo y medidas de evaluación de eficacia de las intervenciones. Tres estudios encontraron diferencias estadísticamente significativas entre los grupos de tratamiento. Conclusiones: La evidencia sobre la eficacia de los tratamientos del rechazo mediado por anticuerpos en injertos renales es de baja calidad. Son necesarios ensayos clínicos controlados para poder definir el tratamiento óptimo de estos pacientes.
Resumo:
In the last decades significant improvements has been reached in short term graft survival, conversely long-term graft survival in still an open challenge for the scientific community. One of the major causes of long term graft loss is represented by chronic- active antibody mediated rejection (cAMR), a recently identified entity whose diagnosis is based on laboratoristic and histologic elements: the presence of DSA associated to specific morphological lesions as inflammation and microvascular damage associated or not to C4d deposition. Treatment of cAMR is an open field of debate. Tocilizumab, an anti-IL6 monoclonal antibody has been recently proposed as a first line treatment for cAMR, showing encouranging results. We describe our monocentric experience using Tocilizumab as first-line therapy for cAMR. Graft function (eGFR), proteinuria and DSA have been evaluated every 6 month for 24 months; histology have been performed after 12 months of treatment. No adverse events have been observed during study period. 12 patients completed the study with a follow-up of 24 months. Kidney function showed a worsening during follow-up that reaches statistical significance at 12 and 24 months (eGFR from 32.2±13.9 ml/min to 26.9±13 ml/min), but far less than expected for these kind of patients. 4 patients (30%) reached ESRD during follow-up, 3 requiring renal replacement therapy. We did not observed any statically significant variation in proteinuria and in DSA MFI levels. From a histological point of view, we observed a significant improvement in active cAMR lesions (C4d deposition and Acute tissue injury (MTA, g>0/ptc>0, v>0) and no progression among chronic lesions (Transplant glomerulopathy, PTC multilayering and aterial intimal fibrosis) Tocilizumab shown good results, with a stabilization of graft function, a reduction in kidney inflammation and active lesions in kidney biopsy and not allowing progression of chronic lesions.