Frontiers in Pediatrics (Sep 2022)

Circulating maternal chimeric cells have an impact on the outcome of biliary atresia

  • Ryuta Masuya,
  • Ryuta Masuya,
  • Toshihiro Muraji,
  • Sami B. Kanaan,
  • Sami B. Kanaan,
  • Toshio Harumatsu,
  • Mitsuru Muto,
  • Miki Toma,
  • Toshihiro Yanai,
  • Anne M. Stevens,
  • J. Lee Nelson,
  • Kazuhiko Nakame,
  • Kazuhiko Nakame,
  • Atsushi Nanashima,
  • Satoshi Ieiri

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fped.2022.1007927
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10

Abstract

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IntroductionWe aimed to quantify the DNA of maternal chimeric (MC) cells in the peripheral blood of the BA patients and investigated the impact on the outcome.MethodsPatients with progressive jaundice because of no bile flow, which necessitated liver transplantation, or who showed inadequate bile flow with or without episodes of cholangitis and progressive hepatic fibrosis and portal hypertension were classified into the poor group. Those with adequate bile flow with completely normal liver function tests beyond 2 years were classified into the good group. The qPCR were separately carried out in buffy coat samples and plasma samples, targeting the non-inherited maternal HLA alleles in the DNA samples.ResultsMC-DNA was present in the buffy coat (10–328 gEq per 106 host cells) in seven patients. There was no MC-DNA in the remaining five patients. MC-DNA (214–15,331 gEq per 106 host cells) was observed in the plasma of five patients. The quantity of MC-DNA in the buffy coat showed a significant difference between the two prognostic groups (p = 0.018), whereas there was no significant difference in the quantity of MC-DNA in plasma (p = 0.205). MC-DNA in the buffy coat was significantly associated with the outcome (p = 0.028), whereas MC-DNA in the plasma did not influence the outcome (p = 0.56).ConclusionsPoor outcomes in BA were correlated with circulating maternal chimeric lymphocytes.

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