Frontiers in Immunology (Jul 2021)

Expression of MICA in Zero Hour Biopsies Predicts Graft Survival After Liver Transplantation

  • Thomas Resch,
  • Hubert Hackl,
  • Hannah Esser,
  • Julia Günther,
  • Hubert Schwelberger,
  • Paul Viktor Ritschl,
  • Susanne Ebner,
  • Manuel Maglione,
  • Vanessa Mellitzer,
  • Matthias Biebl,
  • Robert Öllinger,
  • Heinz Zoller,
  • Stefan Schneeberger,
  • Katja Kotsch

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fimmu.2021.606146
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12

Abstract

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In search for novel biomarkers to assess graft quality, we investigated whether defined candidate genes are predictive for outcome after liver transplantation (LT).Zero-hour liver biopsies were obtained from 88 livers. Gene expression of selected candidate markers was analyzed and correlated with clinical parameters as well as short and long-term outcomes post LT. Whereas both, the calculated Eurotransplant Donor-Risk-Index and the donor body mass index, had either a poor or no predictive value concerning serum levels indicative for liver function (ALT, AST, GGT, bilirubin) after 6 months, chronological donor age was weakly predictive for serum bilirubin (AUC=0.67). In contrast, the major histcompatibility complex class I related chain A (MICA) mRNA expression demonstrated a high predictive value for serum liver function parameters revealing an inverse correlation (e.g. for ALT: 3 months p=0.0332; 6 months p=0.007, 12 months 0.0256, 24 months p=0.0098, 36 months, p=0.0153) and proved significant also in a multivariate regression model. Importantly, high expression of MICA mRNA revealed to be associated with prolonged graft survival (p=0.024; log rank test) after 10 years of observation, whereas low expression was associated with the occurrence of death in patients with transplant related mortality (p=0.031). Given the observed correlation with short and long-term graft function, we suggest MICA as a biomarker for pre-transplant graft evaluation.

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