The causes, significance and consequences of inflammatory fibrosis in kidney transplantation: The Banff i-IFTA lesion
- PMID: 29194971
- DOI: 10.1111/ajt.14609
The causes, significance and consequences of inflammatory fibrosis in kidney transplantation: The Banff i-IFTA lesion
Abstract
Inflammation within areas of interstitial fibrosis and tubular atrophy (i-IFTA) is associated with adverse outcomes in kidney transplantation. We evaluated i-IFTA in 429 indication- and 2052 protocol-driven biopsy samples from a longitudinal cohort of 362 kidney-pancreas recipients to determine its prevalence, time course, and relationships with T cell-mediated rejection (TCMR), immunosuppression, and outcome. Sequential histology demonstrated that i-IFTA was preceded by cellular interstitial inflammation and followed by IF/TA. The prevalence and intensity of i-IFTA increased with developing chronic fibrosis and correlated with inflammation, tubulitis, and immunosuppression era (P < .001). Tacrolimus era-based immunosuppression was associated with reduced histologic inflammation in unscarred and scarred i-IFTA compartments, ameliorated progression of IF, and increased conversion to inactive IF/TA (compared with cyclosporine era, P < .001). Prior acute (including borderline) TCMR and subclinical TCMR were followed by greater 1-year i-IFTA, remaining predictive by multivariate analysis and independent of humoral markers. One-year i-IFTA was associated with accelerated IF/TA, arterial fibrointimal hyperplasia, and chronic glomerulopathy and with reduced renal function (P < .001 versus no i-IFTA). In summary, i-IFTA is the histologic consequence of active T cell-mediated alloimmunity, representing the interface between inflammation and tubular injury with fibrotic healing. Uncontrolled i-IFTA is associated with adverse structural and functional outcomes.
Keywords: classification systems: Banff classification; clinical research/practice; immunosuppressive regimens; kidney transplantation/nephrology; pathology/histopathology; rejection: T cell-mediated (TCMR).
© 2017 The American Society of Transplantation and the American Society of Transplant Surgeons.
Comment in
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Letter to AJT editor re: Nankivell et al.Am J Transplant. 2018 Mar;18(3):765-766. doi: 10.1111/ajt.14653. Epub 2018 Feb 3. Am J Transplant. 2018. PMID: 29316257 No abstract available.
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Reply: i-IFTA is better appreciated by its pathology rather than molecules.Am J Transplant. 2018 Mar;18(3):769-770. doi: 10.1111/ajt.14662. Epub 2018 Feb 13. Am J Transplant. 2018. PMID: 29322621 No abstract available.
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Recognition of i-IF/TA as a component of the T cell-mediated rejection spectrum: Unselected population approach vs random case selection.Am J Transplant. 2018 Mar;18(3):771-772. doi: 10.1111/ajt.14667. Epub 2018 Jan 30. Am J Transplant. 2018. PMID: 29341409 No abstract available.
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