Kidney transplants with progressing chronic diseases express high levels of acute kidney injury transcripts
- PMID: 23356967
- DOI: 10.1111/ajt.12080
Kidney transplants with progressing chronic diseases express high levels of acute kidney injury transcripts
Abstract
We previously reported that kidney transplants with early acute injury express transcripts indicating injury repair--the acute kidney injury signal. This study investigated the significance of this signal in transplants with other conditions, including rejection and recurrent disease. The injury signal was elevated in biopsies in many different conditions, including T cell-mediated rejection and potentially progressive diseases such as antibody-mediated rejection and glomerulonephritis. A high injury signal correlated with poor function and with inflammation in areas of fibrosis, but not with fibrosis without inflammation. In multivariate survival analysis, the injury signal in late kidney transplant biopsies strongly predicted future graft loss, similar to a published molecular risk score derived in late kidneys. Indeed, the injury signal shared many individual transcripts with the risk score, e.g. ITGB6, VCAN, NNMT. The injury signal was a better predictor of future graft loss than fibrosis, inflammation or expression of collagen genes. Thus the acute injury signal, first defined in early reversible injury, is present in many diseases as a reflection of parenchymal distress, where its significance is dictated by the inducing insult, i.e. treatable/self-limited versus untreatable and sustained. Progression in troubled transplants is primarily a function of ongoing parenchymal injury by disease, not fibrogenesis.
© Copyright 2013 The American Society of Transplantation and the American Society of Transplant Surgeons.
Comment in
-
Molecular analysis of renal allograft biopsies--more than a nice toy for researchers?Am J Transplant. 2013 Mar;13(3):539-40. doi: 10.1111/ajt.12081. Am J Transplant. 2013. PMID: 23437880 No abstract available.
Publication types
MeSH terms
Substances
LinkOut - more resources
Full Text Sources
Other Literature Sources
Medical
