Graft-vs-host disease
Background
- Acute vs Chronic
- Acute: 1-12 weeks post graft (<100 days)
- Chronic: >12 weeks
- Transplanted graft with immunologically competent cells stimulated by host antigens and host is incapable of mounting an effective immunologic response
- Occurs in leukemia/lymphoma or immunocompromised
- Most commonly post HSCT: Hematopoietic stem cell transplant
- Rare in solid organ transplant
Clinical Features
Differential Diagnosis
Transfusion Reaction Types
- Acute
- Delayed
Types of Transplant complications
Immediate (0-1 week)
- Acute Tubular Necrosis
- May be post-ischemic, commonly effecting both the proximal tubules and the thick ascending limb. Or it may be immunosupresive drug induced and only effect the proximal tubules. Granular "muddy brown asts" seen on urinalysis result from death and sloughing of tubular cells.
- Antibody mediated rejection
- Results from donor specific antibodies including as ABO isoagglutinins.
- Usually results in graft loss within 24 hours.
- Embolization and Thrombosis
- May arise with or without rejection
- May result from hypotension, anastomotic stenosis, arterial dissection, kinking of transplanted artery, or angulation of the vein
- Calcium Oxalate deposition
- Delayed graft function
- This is defined as renal failure persisting after transplantation necessitating dialysis. It my be due to post-ischemic acute tubular necrosis, volume depletion, or volume depletion.
- Urinary bladder dysfunction
- This complication is especially common in diabetics and may cause hydronephrosis
Early (1-12 weeks)
- Acute rejection
- Antibodies against donor kidney develop after transplant
- Dense interstitial lymphocytic infiltrate
- Prevent/reverse with immunosuppressants
- Immunosuppressive Cytotoxicity
- Usually caused by calcineurin inhibitor toxicity
- Reverse by decrease dosage of immunosuppressants
- Infection
- Most commonly polyoma (BK virus) or cytomegalovirus (CMV)
- Polyoma virus is treated with intravenous immunoglobulins
- CMV is treated with antivirals medications
- Recurrence of primary disease
Late Acute (greater than 3 months)
- Hypertension
- Hypertension is common in ESRD/CKD patients and often worsens after transplant
- Can result in decreased allograft survival
- Renal artery stenosis
- Important to identify because is a correctible cause of post-transplant hypertension
- Acute Rejection
- Same as above
- Immunosuppressive cytotoxicity
- Same as above
Late Chronic (years later)
- Chronic allograft nephropathy
- Irreversible T-cell and antibody mediated damage
- Causes vascular fibrosis
- Immunosuppressive cytotoxicity
- Same as above
Evaluation
- LFT abnormalities
- Pancytopenia
Management
- Glucocorticoids
Disposition
See Also
- Transplant complications
- Transfusions
- Acute transfusion reaction
- Extravascular hemolytic tranfusion reaction
- Graft-vs-host disease