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The effect of pre-transplant and post-transplant anti-AT1R antibodies in heart transplant recipients

Publication ,  Journal Article
Thohan, V; Michel, K; Purohit, A; Malick, O; Downey, FX; Oaks, M
Published in: Transplantation Reports
December 1, 2020

Background: The presence of autoantibodies to angiotensin 2 type 1 receptor (anti-AT1R) have been implicated in allograft pathobiology following organ transplantation. While the significance of these antibodies has been described in renal transplantation, relatively few studies have examined their frequency and clinical implications in heart transplant patients. Methods: We analyzed serum collected from 291 heart transplant recipients at the time of transplantation for the presence of anti-AT1R and repeated testing on serum collected from 176 of these patients following transplantation. Patients were followed for outcomes including overall survival, rejection episodes (acute cellular and antibody mediated), coronary allograft vasculopathy, and measures of allograft structure and cardiac function. Results: Anti-AT1R was detected in the serum of 165/291 patients pre-transplant and in 86/176 patients post-transplant. The detection of anti-AT1R (either at risk or positive) compared with no detection in serum of patients pre- or post-transplantation had no influence on 10-year survival (Log rank 0.061 and 0.228, detection pre- or post-transplant, respectively). Similarly, the detection of anti-AT1R had no influence on important clinical outcomes of heart transplantation including acute cellular rejection (ACR), antibody-mediated rejection (AMR) or cardiac allograft vasculopathy (CAV), left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF) or left ventricular mass (LV-mass). Conclusions: The presence of anti-AT1R detected in patient serum samples by commercially available testing pre- or post- heart transplantation was not associated with clinically important outcomes including LV-mass, LVEF, ACR, AMR, CAV and overall survival. Our data brings into question the relevance of anti-AT1R testing as a risk factor or target for therapy among heart transplant recipients.

Duke Scholars

Published In

Transplantation Reports

DOI

ISSN

2451-9596

Publication Date

December 1, 2020

Volume

5

Issue

4
 

Citation

APA
Chicago
ICMJE
MLA
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Thohan, V., Michel, K., Purohit, A., Malick, O., Downey, F. X., & Oaks, M. (2020). The effect of pre-transplant and post-transplant anti-AT1R antibodies in heart transplant recipients. Transplantation Reports, 5(4). https://doi.org/10.1016/j.tpr.2020.100069
Thohan, V., K. Michel, A. Purohit, O. Malick, F. X. Downey, and M. Oaks. “The effect of pre-transplant and post-transplant anti-AT1R antibodies in heart transplant recipients.” Transplantation Reports 5, no. 4 (December 1, 2020). https://doi.org/10.1016/j.tpr.2020.100069.
Thohan V, Michel K, Purohit A, Malick O, Downey FX, Oaks M. The effect of pre-transplant and post-transplant anti-AT1R antibodies in heart transplant recipients. Transplantation Reports. 2020 Dec 1;5(4).
Thohan, V., et al. “The effect of pre-transplant and post-transplant anti-AT1R antibodies in heart transplant recipients.” Transplantation Reports, vol. 5, no. 4, Dec. 2020. Scopus, doi:10.1016/j.tpr.2020.100069.
Thohan V, Michel K, Purohit A, Malick O, Downey FX, Oaks M. The effect of pre-transplant and post-transplant anti-AT1R antibodies in heart transplant recipients. Transplantation Reports. 2020 Dec 1;5(4).
Journal cover image

Published In

Transplantation Reports

DOI

ISSN

2451-9596

Publication Date

December 1, 2020

Volume

5

Issue

4