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Review
. 2015 Aug;20(4):476-81.
doi: 10.1097/MOT.0000000000000208.

Urinary biomarkers of renal transplant outcome

Affiliations
Review

Urinary biomarkers of renal transplant outcome

Julie Ho et al. Curr Opin Organ Transplant. 2015 Aug.

Abstract

Purpose of review: Renal allograft loss remains an important cause of morbidity and mortality. The objective of this review was to provide a rationale for noninvasive monitoring to identify patients at high risk for graft loss; discuss key steps in prognostic biomarker development from bench-to-bedside; and review promising biomarkers for late renal allograft outcomes.

Recent findings: In a multicentre prospective cohort, early 6-month urinary CCL2 was demonstrated to be associated with the development of 24-month interstitial fibrosis/tubular atrophy and inflammation (IFTA+i). These findings were extended to a single centre cohort, which showed that 6-month urinary CCL2 was a predictor of death-censored graft loss independent of donor-specific antibody and delayed graft function. In a large, multicentre prospective observational study (CTOT-01), 6-month urinary CXCL9 was significantly associated with more than 30% decline of graft function at 24 months.

Summary: Urinary chemokines may identify recipients who are at high risk of graft loss. The early detection of high-risk recipients may allow for more intensive posttransplant surveillance; avoidance of drug minimization/withdrawal protocols; and the identification of patients who may benefit from enrolment in novel interventional trials. Prospective trials are needed to demonstrate that urinary chemokine-guided posttransplant surveillance strategies improve long-term graft outcomes.

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