J Nephrol. 2025 Jun 18. doi: 10.1007/s40620-025-02308-3. Online ahead of print.
ABSTRACT
BACKGROUND: Transplant arteriopathy involves a spectrum of Leukocyte Common Antigen-positive, hypoelastotic, foam cell intimal fibrosis. Transplant arteriopathy has been associated with both Chronic Active T Cell-Mediated Rejection and Antibody-Mediated Rejection chronicity. Aim of this study was to find clinicopathological correlates of transplant arteriopathy in a single centre retrospective cohort.
METHODS: We retrieved 46 biopsies showing transplant arteriopathy from 33 patients, out of a total of 784 biopsies carried out between 2005 and 2014. We retrospectively evaluated Banff Lesion Scores and Additional Diagnostic Parameters as well as the transplant arteriopathy descriptors Leukocyte Common Antigen-positive, hypoelastotic, foam cell, and correlated these findings with clinical data and death-censored transplant survival.
RESULTS: Transplant arteriopathy was frequently associated with antibody-mediated rejection-associated Banff Lesions Scores and Additional Diagnostic Parameters. Hypoelastotic, leukocyte common antigen-positive and foam cell lesions were often combined, with hypoelastotic lesion being the most frequent finding in transplant arteriopathy. Leukocyte common antigen-positive lesion appeared earlier and was associated with Banff Lesion Score v ≥ 1. About half were positive for donor-specific antibodies, about a third had concurrent transplant glomerulopathy, and about a sixth were C4d-positive. Twelve of thirty-three transplants were lost during follow-up, concurrent transplant glomerulopathy was associated with shorter transplant survival.
CONCLUSIONS: The frequent coincidence of transplant arteriopathy and indicators of antibody-mediated rejection suggests that this arterial remodelling could indeed be antibody-mediated rejection chronicity. The transplant community should re-examine transplant arteriopathy with an expanded definition including the previously ignored hypoelastotic lesion in order to re-confirm or reject with confidence transplant arteriopathy as Additional Diagnostic Parameter of Antibody-Mediated Rejection chronicity, and to learn about its prognostic and therapeutic implications.
PMID:40533723 | DOI:10.1007/s40620-025-02308-3