Molecular Classifiers for Acute Kidney Transplant Rejection in Peripheral Blood by Whole Genome Gene Expression Profiling

Sunil M. Kurian(Scripps Research Institute), Alun Williams(Genomics (United Kingdom)), Terri Gelbart(Genomics (United Kingdom)), Daniel Campbell(Genomics (United Kingdom)), Tony S. Mondala(Genomics (United Kingdom)), Steve R. Head(Scripps Research Institute), Steve Horvath(Collaborative Group (United States)), Lillian W. Gaber(Texas Medical Center), Ryan C. Thompson(Scripps Research Institute), Thomas Whisenant(Scripps Research Institute), Wen Lin(Collaborative Group (United States)), Peter Langfelder(Genomics (United Kingdom)), Elizabeth H. Robison(Genomics (United Kingdom)), Randolph Schaffer(Genomics (United Kingdom)), Jonathan S. Fisher(Genomics (United Kingdom)), John J. Friedewald(Northwestern University), Stuart M. Flechner(Collaborative Group (United States)), Laurence Chan(University of Colorado Denver), Alexander C. Wiseman(Genomics (United Kingdom)), Hamid Shidban(St Vincent Medical Center), R Mendez(Collaborative Group (United States)), Raymond L. Heilman(Genomics (United Kingdom)), Michaël Abécassis(Northwestern University), Christopher L. Marsh(Scripps Health), Daniel R. Salomon(Scripps Research Institute)
American Journal of Transplantation
April 11, 2014
Cited by 114Open Access
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Abstract

There are no minimally invasive diagnostic metrics for acute kidney transplant rejection (AR), especially in the setting of the common confounding diagnosis, acute dysfunction with no rejection (ADNR). Thus, though kidney transplant biopsies remain the gold standard, they are invasive, have substantial risks, sampling error issues and significant costs and are not suitable for serial monitoring. Global gene expression profiles of 148 peripheral blood samples from transplant patients with excellent function and normal histology (TX; n = 46), AR (n = 63) and ADNR (n = 39), from two independent cohorts were analyzed with DNA microarrays. We applied a new normalization tool, frozen robust multi-array analysis, particularly suitable for clinical diagnostics, multiple prediction tools to discover, refine and validate robust molecular classifiers and we tested a novel one-by-one analysis strategy to model the real clinical application of this test. Multiple three-way classifier tools identified 200 highest value probesets with sensitivity, specificity, positive predictive value, negative predictive value and area under the curve for the validation cohort ranging from 82% to 100%, 76% to 95%, 76% to 95%, 79% to 100%, 84% to 100% and 0.817 to 0.968, respectively. We conclude that peripheral blood gene expression profiling can be used as a minimally invasive tool to accurately reveal TX, AR and ADNR in the setting of acute kidney transplant dysfunction. There are no minimally invasive diagnostic metrics for acute kidney transplant rejection (AR), especially in the setting of the common confounding diagnosis, acute dysfunction with no rejection (ADNR). Thus, though kidney transplant biopsies remain the gold standard, they are invasive, have substantial risks, sampling error issues and significant costs and are not suitable for serial monitoring. Global gene expression profiles of 148 peripheral blood samples from transplant patients with excellent function and normal histology (TX; n = 46), AR (n = 63) and ADNR (n = 39), from two independent cohorts were analyzed with DNA microarrays. We applied a new normalization tool, frozen robust multi-array analysis, particularly suitable for clinical diagnostics, multiple prediction tools to discover, refine and validate robust molecular classifiers and we tested a novel one-by-one analysis strategy to model the real clinical application of this test. Multiple three-way classifier tools identified 200 highest value probesets with sensitivity, specificity, positive predictive value, negative predictive value and area under the curve for the validation cohort ranging from 82% to 100%, 76% to 95%, 76% to 95%, 79% to 100%, 84% to 100% and 0.817 to 0.968, respectively. We conclude that peripheral blood gene expression profiling can be used as a minimally invasive tool to accurately reveal TX, AR and ADNR in the setting of acute kidney transplant dysfunction.


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