Frontiers in Immunology (Apr 2019)

Exploratory Study of Predicted Indirectly ReCognizable HLA Epitopes in Mismatched Hematopoietic Cell Transplantations

  • Kirsten Geneugelijk,
  • Kirsten A. Thus,
  • Hanneke W. M. van Deutekom,
  • Jorg J. A. Calis,
  • Eric Borst,
  • Can Keşmir,
  • Machteld Oudshoorn,
  • Machteld Oudshoorn,
  • Bronno van der Holt,
  • Ellen Meijer,
  • Sacha Zeerleder,
  • Marco R. de Groot,
  • Peter A. von dem Borne,
  • Nicolaas Schaap,
  • Jan Cornelissen,
  • Jürgen Kuball,
  • Jürgen Kuball,
  • Eric Spierings

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fimmu.2019.00880
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10

Abstract

Read online

HLA-mismatches in hematopoietic stem-cell transplantation are associated with an impaired overall survival (OS). The aim of this study is to explore whether the Predicted Indirectly ReCognizable HLA-Epitopes (PIRCHE) algorithm can be used to identify HLA-mismatches that are related to an impaired transplant outcome. PIRCHE are computationally predicted peptides derived from the patient's mismatched-HLA molecules that can be presented by donor-patient shared HLA. We retrospectively scored PIRCHE numbers either presented on HLA class-I (PIRCHE-I) or class-II (PIRCHE-II) for a Dutch multicenter cohort of 103 patients who received a single HLA-mismatched (9/10) unrelated donor transplant in an early phase of their disease. These patients were divided into low and high PIRCHE-I and PIRCHE-II groups, based on their PIRCHE scores, and compared using multivariate statistical analysis methods. The high PIRCHE-II group had a significantly impaired OS compared to the low PIRCHE-II group and the 10/10 reference group (HR: 1.86, 95%-CI: 1.02–3.40; and HR: 2.65, 95%-CI: 1.53–4.60, respectively). Overall, PIRCHE-II seem to have a more prominent effect on OS than PIRCHE-I. This impaired OS is probably due to an increased risk for severe acute graft-vs.-host disease. These data suggest that high PIRCHE-II scores may be used to identify non-permissible HLA mismatches within single HLA-mismatched hematopoietic stem-cell transplantations.

Keywords