Journal of Clinical Medicine (Jun 2022)

De Novo Complement-Binding Anti-HLA Antibodies in Heart Transplanted Patients Is Associated with Severe Cardiac Allograft Vasculopathy and Poor Long-Term Survival

  • Guillaume Baudry,
  • Matteo Pozzi,
  • Matthieu Aubry,
  • Elisabeth Hugon-Vallet,
  • Raluca Mocan,
  • Lara Chalabreysse,
  • Philippe Portran,
  • Jean-François Obadia,
  • Olivier Thaunat,
  • Nicolas Girerd,
  • Valérie Dubois,
  • Laurent Sebbag

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm11133731
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 13
p. 3731

Abstract

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Introduction: De novo anti-HLA donor specific antibodies (DSA) have been inconsistently associated with cardiac allograft vasculopathy (CAV) and long-term mortality. We tested whether C3d-binding de novo DSA were associated with CAV or long-term-survival. Methods: We included 282 consecutive patients without preformed DSA on coronary angiography between 2010 and 2012. Angiographies were classified according to CAV ISHLT grading. The primary outcome was a composite criterion of severe CAV or mortality. As the impact of de novo antibodies should be assessed only after appearance, we used a Cox regression with time-dependent covariables. Results: Of the 282 patients, 51(18%) developed de novo DSA during follow-up, 29 patients had DSA with C3d-binding ability (DSA+C3d+), and 22 were without C3d-binding ability (DSA+C3d-). Compared with patients without DSA, DSA+C3d+ patients had an increased risk for the primary outcome of severe CAV or mortality (adjusted HR = 4.31 (2.40–7.74) p p p = 0.937 for primary outcome and HR = 1.08 (0.45–2.61) p = 0.866 for mortality). Conclusion: According to this large monocentric study in heart transplant patients, donor specific antibodies were associated with worse clinical outcome when binding complement. DSA and their complement-binding ability should thus be screened for to optimize heart transplant patient follow-up.

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