Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
5670449 Transplant Immunology 2017 6 Pages PDF
Abstract

•In kidney transplantation steroid avoidance enhances risk of early rejection.•Molecular mechanism of steroid effect was studied in steroid avoidance groups.•Steroids reduced Th1 rejection associated transcripts at first posttransplant week.

BackgroundSteroid avoidance in immunosuppression in kidney transplantation offers several metabolic advantages, however it is associated with higher early acute rejection rate. Cellular and molecular mechanisms of this phenomenon remain poorly understood.MethodsIn this single center observational study, low-risk kidney transplant recipients randomized into large multicenter prospective ADVANCE trial with steroid avoidance/early withdrawal and center standard of care treated patients were monitored for 12 months. The expressions of 28 transcripts, associated with alloimmune response and operational tolerance, were evaluated in the peripheral blood using RT-qPCR at 0, 7, 14, 90 and 365 postoperative days (POD) and in the protocol graft biopsy at 3 months while lymphocyte subpopulations were analyzed by flow-cytometry within the follow-up.ResultsBoth steroid avoidance and withdrawal regimens were associated with significantly higher granzyme B (GZMB) transcript at POD 14 and perforin 1 (PRF1) transcript at POD 7. The higher interleukin 2 (IL-2) expression at POD 7 was detected only in the steroid avoidance group. Initial steroids decreased the expression SH2D1B transcript at POD14 and there were no further differences in other operational tolerance transcripts among groups. The statistically significant decrease in absolute numbers of peripheral NK cells in the first 14 days was observed in the standard of care group only. There were no differences in analyzed intrarenal transcripts in 3-month biopsies among groups.ConclusionsThe enhanced expression of some of Th1 associated transcripts and limited effects on NK cells of steroid avoidance immunosuppression suggest higher susceptibility for early acute rejection.

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