The Impact of Donor-Recipient Human Leukocyte Antigen Matching on Bronchiolitis Obliterans-Free Survival Among Lung Transplant Recipients With Connective Tissue Diseases

IF 1.9 4区 医学 Q2 SURGERY Clinical Transplantation Pub Date : 2024-08-13 DOI:10.1111/ctr.15426
Andrew M. Courtwright, Joshua M. Diamond, Nora Sandorfi, Hilary J. Goldberg
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Abstract

Background

The development of connective tissue disease-associated lung diseases (CTD-LD) occurs in association with specific human leukocyte antigens (HLA). For CTD-LD patients who require lung transplant, it is unknown whether utilization of donor organs expressing these same HLA impacts posttransplant outcomes.

Methods

Using the Scientific Registry of Transplant Recipients, we assessed whether CTD-LD lung transplant recipients in the United States have worse bronchiolitis obliterans (BOS)-free survival based on the degree of donor HLA matching. This included overall degree of donor-recipient HLA matching, donor-recipient matching at DR loci, and recipient matching with specific donor HLA antigens associated with the development of pulmonary disease in their condition.

Results

Among 1413 patients with CTD-ILD, highly HLA-matched donor-recipients did not have worse adjusted survival (hazard ratio [HR] = 0.93, 95% confidence interval [CI] = 0.58–1.51, p = 0.77). Recipients who were fully matched at HLA DR did not have worse survival (HR = 0.82, 95% CI = 0.56–1.19, p = 0.29). Finally, among individual CTD-LD, including rheumatoid arthritis, systemic sclerosis, the idiopathic inflammatory myopathies, and systemic lupus erythematous, transplant with a donor expressing HLA antigens associated with lung manifestations in these conditions was not associated with worse BOS-free survival.

Conclusions

Among transplant recipients with CTD-LD, HLA donor-recipient matching, including at the DR loci, does not result in worse BOS-free survival. Based on these findings, there is no reason to treat these as unacceptable antigens when considering donor offers for CTD-LD candidates.

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捐赠者-受者人类白细胞抗原匹配对患有结缔组织疾病的肺移植受者无支气管炎生存期的影响
背景:结缔组织病相关肺病(CTD-LD)的发生与特定人类白细胞抗原(HLA)有关。对于需要进行肺移植的 CTD-LD 患者来说,使用表达相同 HLA 的供体器官是否会影响移植后的预后尚不清楚:我们利用移植受者科学注册中心(Scientific Registry of Transplant Recipients)评估了美国 CTD-LD 肺移植受者的无支气管炎(BOS)生存率是否会因供体 HLA 匹配程度而降低。这包括供体与受体HLA的总体匹配程度、供体与受体在DR位点上的匹配程度以及受体与与肺部疾病发展相关的特定供体HLA抗原的匹配程度:在1413名CTD-ILD患者中,HLA高度匹配的供体-受体的调整后生存率并不差(危险比[HR] = 0.93,95%置信区间[CI] = 0.58-1.51,P = 0.77)。HLA DR完全匹配的受者生存率也没有降低(HR = 0.82,95% CI = 0.56-1.19,P = 0.29)。最后,在包括类风湿性关节炎、系统性硬化症、特发性炎症性肌病和系统性红斑狼疮在内的CTD-LD个体中,与这些疾病的肺部表现相关的HLA抗原表达供体进行移植与无BOS生存率降低无关:结论:在 CTD-LD 移植受者中,HLA 供体与受体匹配(包括 DR 基因位点匹配)不会导致无 BOS 存活率降低。根据这些发现,在考虑为 CTD-LD 候选者提供供体时,没有理由将这些抗原视为不可接受的抗原。
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来源期刊
Clinical Transplantation
Clinical Transplantation 医学-外科
CiteScore
3.70
自引率
4.80%
发文量
286
审稿时长
2 months
期刊介绍: Clinical Transplantation: The Journal of Clinical and Translational Research aims to serve as a channel of rapid communication for all those involved in the care of patients who require, or have had, organ or tissue transplants, including: kidney, intestine, liver, pancreas, islets, heart, heart valves, lung, bone marrow, cornea, skin, bone, and cartilage, viable or stored. Published monthly, Clinical Transplantation’s scope is focused on the complete spectrum of present transplant therapies, as well as also those that are experimental or may become possible in future. Topics include: Immunology and immunosuppression; Patient preparation; Social, ethical, and psychological issues; Complications, short- and long-term results; Artificial organs; Donation and preservation of organ and tissue; Translational studies; Advances in tissue typing; Updates on transplant pathology;. Clinical and translational studies are particularly welcome, as well as focused reviews. Full-length papers and short communications are invited. Clinical reviews are encouraged, as well as seminal papers in basic science which might lead to immediate clinical application. Prominence is regularly given to the results of cooperative surveys conducted by the organ and tissue transplant registries. Clinical Transplantation: The Journal of Clinical and Translational Research is essential reading for clinicians and researchers in the diverse field of transplantation: surgeons; clinical immunologists; cryobiologists; hematologists; gastroenterologists; hepatologists; pulmonologists; nephrologists; cardiologists; and endocrinologists. It will also be of interest to sociologists, psychologists, research workers, and to all health professionals whose combined efforts will improve the prognosis of transplant recipients.
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