학술논문

Urine marker analysis identifies evidence for persistent glomerular podocyte injury across allograft lifespan.
Document Type
Article
Source
Clinical Transplantation. Nov2021, Vol. 35 Issue 11, p1-10. 10p.
Subject
*URINALYSIS
*HOMOGRAFTS
*GRAFT survival
*GENERALIZED estimating equations
*GLOMERULAR filtration rate
Language
ISSN
0902-0063
Abstract
Long‐term kidney transplant (KT) survival has remained relatively stagnant. Protocol biopsy studies suggest that glomerulosclerosis is a significant contributor to long‐term graft failure. We previously demonstrated that podocyte loss in the first year post‐transplantation predicted long‐term allograft survival. However, whether increased podocyte loss continues over the lifespan of a KT remains unclear. We performed a cross‐sectional analysis of 1182 urine samples from 260 KT recipients up to 19‐years after transplantation. Urine pellet (UP) mRNAs were assayed for podocyte (NPHS2/podocin and nephrin/NPHS1), distal tubule (aquaporin2), and profibrotic cytokine (TGFbeta1). Multivariable generalized estimating equations were used to obtain "population‐averaged" effects for these markers over time post‐KT. Consistent with early stresses both podocyte and tubular markers increased immediately post‐KT. However, only podocyte markers continued to increase long‐term. A role for hypertrophic stresses in driving podocyte loss over time is implied by their association with donor BMI, recipient BMI, and donor‐recipient BMI mismatch at transplantation. Furthermore, UP podocin mRNA was associated with urine TGFbeta1, proteinuria, and reduced estimated glomerular filtration rate, thereby linking podocyte injury to allograft fibrosis and survival. In conclusion we observed that podocyte loss continues long‐term post‐KT suggesting an important role in driving late graft loss. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]