Effects of reduced-dose anti-human T-lymphocyte globulin on overall and donor-specific T-cell repertoire reconstitution in sensitized kidney transplant recipients

C Aschauer, K Jelencsics, K Hu, M Gregorich… - Frontiers in …, 2022 - frontiersin.org
C Aschauer, K Jelencsics, K Hu, M Gregorich, R Reindl-Schwaighofer, S Wenda, T Wekerle…
Frontiers in Immunology, 2022frontiersin.org
Background Pre-sensitized kidney transplant recipients have a higher risk for rejection
following kidney transplantation and therefore receive lymphodepletional induction therapy
with anti-human T-lymphocyte globulin (ATLG) whereas non-sensitized patients are induced
in many centers with basiliximab. The time course of lymphocyte reconstitution with regard to
the overall and donor-reactive T-cell receptor (TCR) specificity remains elusive.
Methods/Design Five kidney transplant recipients receiving a 1.5-mg/kg ATLG induction …
Background
Pre-sensitized kidney transplant recipients have a higher risk for rejection following kidney transplantation and therefore receive lymphodepletional induction therapy with anti-human T-lymphocyte globulin (ATLG) whereas non-sensitized patients are induced in many centers with basiliximab. The time course of lymphocyte reconstitution with regard to the overall and donor-reactive T-cell receptor (TCR) specificity remains elusive.
Methods/Design
Five kidney transplant recipients receiving a 1.5-mg/kg ATLG induction therapy over 7 days and five patients with 2 × 20 mg basiliximab induction therapy were longitudinally monitored. Peripheral mononuclear cells were sampled pre-transplant and within 1, 3, and 12 months after transplantation, and their overall and donor-reactive TCRs were determined by next-generation sequencing of the TCR beta CDR3 region. Overall TCR repertoire diversity, turnover, and donor specificity were assessed at all timepoints.
Results
We observed an increase in the donor-reactive TCR repertoire after transplantation in patients, independent of lymphocyte counts or induction therapy. Donor-reactive CD4 T-cell frequency in the ATLG group increased from 1.14% + -0.63 to 2.03% + -1.09 and from 0.93% + -0.63 to 1.82% + -1.17 in the basiliximab group in the first month. Diversity measurements of the entire T-cell repertoire and repertoire turnover showed no statistical difference between the two induction therapies. The difference in mean clonality between groups was 0.03 and 0.07 pre-transplant in the CD4 and CD8 fractions, respectively, and was not different over time (CD4: F(1.45, 11.6) = 0.64 p = 0.496; CD8: F(3, 24) = 0.60 p = 0.620). The mean difference in R20, a metric for immune dominance, between groups was -0.006 in CD4 and 0.001 in CD8 T-cells and not statistically different between the groups and subsequent timepoints (CD4: F(3, 24) = 0.85 p = 0.479; CD8: F(1.19, 9.52) = 0.79 p = 0.418).
Conclusion
Reduced-dose ATLG induction therapy led to an initial lymphodepletion followed by an increase in the percentage of donor-reactive T-cells after transplantation similar to basiliximab induction therapy. Furthermore, reduced-dose ATLG did not change the overall TCR repertoire in terms of a narrowed or skewed TCR repertoire after immune reconstitution, comparable to non-depletional induction therapy.
Frontiers
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