Clinical predictors of renal allograft histopathology: a comparative study of single-lesion histology versus a composite, quantitative scoring system
- PMID: 17414693
- DOI: 10.1097/01.tp.0000262015.77625.90
Clinical predictors of renal allograft histopathology: a comparative study of single-lesion histology versus a composite, quantitative scoring system
Abstract
Background: Progressive injury that is refractory to conventional immunosuppression remains the major hurdle to indefinite survival of transplanted organs. Several clinical risk factors of chronic renal allograft rejection have been identified; although some (e.g., acute rejection) are direct manifestations of immunological injury, others (e.g., donor age) have been more difficult to conceptually link with graft dysfunction.
Methods: We conducted formal multivariate statistical analyses to reveal associations between established clinical risk factors and allograft histopathology. In a multicenter protocol biopsy-controlled study, 17 clinical risk factors were studied in relation to either the composite Chronic Allograft Damage Index (CADI) score or, to each of eight individual histological indices, using multiple linear regression with forward selection.
Results: Nine clinical risk factors were not significantly associated with any histopathological index. Four (donor age, acute rejection, recipient age, and cold ischemia time) were associated both with the total CADI score and, to varying extents, with the individual histopathological indices. In our analysis, clinical risk factors accounted for, at best, only about 60% of the interindividual variation in histopathological score.
Conclusions: Our study reveals a missing link between specific clinical risk factors and early histopathological findings that are known to presage accelerated failure of clinically healthy grafts. Given the complex relationship between clinical risk factors, early histopathological changes, and graft outcome, we conclude that composite, quantitative histological indices are best suited to for evaluation of the histological status of the transplant.
Comment in
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CADI, Canti, Cavi.Transplantation. 2007 Mar 27;83(6):677-8. doi: 10.1097/01.tp.0000262011.05196.a1. Transplantation. 2007. PMID: 17414694 No abstract available.
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Risk factors, graft fibrosis, and outcome: making the links.Transplantation. 2007 Mar 27;83(6):679-80. doi: 10.1097/01.tp.0000262012.60348.22. Transplantation. 2007. PMID: 17414695 No abstract available.
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Predicting allograft survival: abundant data, but insufficient knowledge?Transplantation. 2007 Mar 27;83(6):681. doi: 10.1097/01.tp.0000262005.84789.de. Transplantation. 2007. PMID: 17414696 No abstract available.
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Importance of age in evolving graft histology.Transplantation. 2007 Mar 27;83(6):682. doi: 10.1097/01.tp.0000262016.63309.ae. Transplantation. 2007. PMID: 17414697 No abstract available.
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