Banff ’09 Meeting Report: Antibody Mediated Graft Deterioration and Implementation of Banff Working Groups

B. Sis(University of Alberta), Michael Mengel(University of Alberta), Mark Haas(Cedars-Sinai Medical Center), Robert B. Colvin(Massachusetts General Hospital), Philip F. Halloran(University of Alberta), Lorraine C. Racusen(Johns Hopkins University), Kim Solez, William M. Baldwin(Cleveland Clinic Lerner College of Medicine), Erika Bracamonte(University of Arizona), Verena Broecker(Medizinische Hochschule Hannover), Borja G. Cosío(Mayo Clinic), A J Demetris(University of Pittsburgh), Cinthia B. Drachenberg(University of Maryland, Baltimore), Gunilla Einecke(Medizinische Hochschule Hannover), J.M. Gloor(Mayo Clinic), Denis Glotz(Hôpital Saint-Louis), Edward S. Kraus(Johns Hopkins University), Claire Legendre(Hôpital Necker-Enfants Malades), Helen Liapis(Washington University in St. Louis), Roslyn B. Mannon(Pediatric Nephrology of Alabama), Brian J. Nankivell(Westmead Hospital), Volker Nickeleit(University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill), John C. Papadimitriou(University of Maryland, Baltimore), Parmjeet Randhawa(University of Pittsburgh), Heinz Regele(University of Vienna), Karine Renaudin(Hôtel-Dieu de Paris), E. René Rodríguez(Cleveland Clinic), Daniel Serón(Vall d'Hebron Hospital Universitari), Surya V. Seshan(NewYork–Presbyterian Hospital), Manikkam Suthanthiran(Cornell University), B Wa̧sowska(Johns Hopkins University), Andrea A. Zachary(Johns Hopkins University), Adriana Zeevi(University of Pittsburgh)
American Journal of Transplantation
January 29, 2010
Cited by 760Open Access
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Abstract

The 10th Banff Conference on Allograft Pathology was held in Banff, Canada from August 9 to 14, 2009. A total of 263 transplant clinicians, pathologists, surgeons, immunologists and researchers discussed several aspects of solid organ transplants with a special focus on antibody mediated graft injury. The willingness of the Banff process to adapt continuously in response to new research and improve potential weaknesses, led to the implementation of six working groups on the following areas: isolated v‐lesion, fibrosis scoring, glomerular lesions, molecular pathology, polyomavirus nephropathy and quality assurance. Banff working groups will conduct multicenter trials to evaluate the clinical relevance, practical feasibility and reproducibility of potential changes to the Banff classification. There were also sessions on quality improvement in biopsy reading and utilization of virtual microscopy for maintaining competence in transplant biopsy interpretation. In addition, compelling molecular research data led to the discussion of incorporation of omics‐technologies and discovery of new tissue markers with the goal of combining histopathology and molecular parameters within the Banff working classification in the near future. The 10th Banff Conference on Allograft Pathology was held in Banff, Canada from August 9 to 14, 2009. A total of 263 transplant clinicians, pathologists, surgeons, immunologists and researchers discussed several aspects of solid organ transplants with a special focus on antibody mediated graft injury. The willingness of the Banff process to adapt continuously in response to new research and improve potential weaknesses, led to the implementation of six working groups on the following areas: isolated v‐lesion, fibrosis scoring, glomerular lesions, molecular pathology, polyomavirus nephropathy and quality assurance. Banff working groups will conduct multicenter trials to evaluate the clinical relevance, practical feasibility and reproducibility of potential changes to the Banff classification. There were also sessions on quality improvement in biopsy reading and utilization of virtual microscopy for maintaining competence in transplant biopsy interpretation. In addition, compelling molecular research data led to the discussion of incorporation of omics‐technologies and discovery of new tissue markers with the goal of combining histopathology and molecular parameters within the Banff working classification in the near future.


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