Toward a Sensible Single-antigen Bead Cutoff Based on Kidney Graft Survival

Transplantation. 2019 Apr;103(4):789-797. doi: 10.1097/TP.0000000000002357.

Abstract

Background: There is no consensus in the literature on the interpretation of single-antigen bead positive for a specific HLA antibody.

Methods: To inform the debate, we studied the relationship between various single-antigen bead positivity algorithms and the impact of resulting donor-specific HLA antibody (DSA) positivity on long-term kidney graft survival in 3237 deceased-donor transplants.

Results: First, we showed that the interassay variability can be greatly reduced when working with signal-to-background ratios instead of absolute median fluorescence intensities (MFIs). Next, we determined pretransplant DSA using various MFI cutoffs, signal-to-background ratios, and combinations thereof. The impact of the various cutoffs was studied by comparing the graft survival between the DSA-positive and DSA-negative groups. We did not observe a strong impact of various cutoff levels on 10-year graft survival. A stronger relationship between the cutoff level and 1-year graft survival for DSA-positive transplants was found when using signal-to-background ratios, most pronounced for the bead of the same HLA locus with lowest MFI taken as background.

Conclusions: With respect to pretransplant risk stratification, we propose a signal-to-background ratio-6 (using the bead of the same HLA-locus with lowest MFI as background) cutoff of 15 combined with an MFI cutoff of 500, resulting in 8% and 21% lower 1- and 10-year graft survivals, respectively, for 8% DSA-positive transplants.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Fluorescence
  • Graft Survival*
  • HLA Antigens / immunology*
  • Humans
  • Isoantibodies / blood
  • Kidney Transplantation*
  • Tissue Donors

Substances

  • HLA Antigens
  • Isoantibodies