- Burke, George W;
- Chandar, Jayanthi;
- Sageshima, Junichiro;
- Ortigosa-Goggins, Mariella;
- Amarapurkar, Pooja;
- Mitrofanova, Alla;
- Defreitas, Marissa J;
- Katsoufis, Chryso P;
- Seeherunvong, Wacharee;
- Centeno, Alexandra;
- Pagan, Javier;
- Mendez-Castaner, Lumen A;
- Mattiazzi, Adela D;
- Kupin, Warren L;
- Guerra, Giselle;
- Chen, Linda J;
- Morsi, Mahmoud;
- Figueiro, Jose MG;
- Vianna, Rodrigo;
- Abitbol, Carolyn L;
- Roth, David;
- Fornoni, Alessia;
- Ruiz, Phillip;
- Ciancio, Gaetano;
- Garin, Eduardo H
Background
Primary FSGS manifests with nephrotic syndrome and may recur following KT. Failure to respond to conventional therapy after recurrence results in poor outcomes. Evaluation of podocyte B7-1 expression and treatment with abatacept (a B7-1 antagonist) has shown promise but remains controversial.Methods
From 2012 to 2020, twelve patients developed post-KT FSGS with nephrotic range proteinuria, failed conventional therapy, and were treated with abatacept. Nine/twelve (< 21 years old) experienced recurrent FSGS; three adults developed de novo FSGS, occurring from immediately, up to 8 years after KT. KT biopsies were stained for B7-1.Results
Nine KTRs (75%) responded to abatacept. Seven of nine KTRs were B7-1 positive and responded with improvement/resolution of proteinuria. Two patients with rFSGS without biopsies resolved proteinuria after abatacept. Pre-treatment UPCR was 27.0 ± 20.4 (median 13, range 8-56); follow-up UPCR was 0.8 ± 1.3 (median 0.2, range 0.07-3.9, p < 0.004). Two patients who were B7-1 negative on multiple KT biopsies did not respond to abatacept and lost graft function. One patient developed proteinuria while receiving belatacept, stained B7-1 positive, but did not respond to abatacept.Conclusions
Podocyte B7-1 staining in biopsies of KTRs with post-transplant FSGS identifies a subset of patients who may benefit from abatacept. A higher resolution version of the Graphical abstract is available as Supplementary information.