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Blood immunophenotyping identifies distinct kidney histopathology and outcomes in patients with lupus nephritis.

Alice HorisbergerAlec GriffithJoshua KeeganArnon AraziJohn PulfordEkaterina MurzinKaitlyn HowardBrandon HancockAndrea FavaTakanori SasakiTusharkanti GhoshJun InamoRebecca BeuschelYe CaoKatie PreisingerMaria Gutierrez-ArcelusThomas M EisenhaureJoel M GuthridgePaul J HooverMaria Dall'EraDavid WofsyDiane L KamenKenneth C KalunianRichard FurieMichael BelmontPeter IzmirlyRobert ClancyDavid A HildemanE Steve WoodleWilliam ApruzzeseMaureen A McMahonJennifer GrossmanJennifer L BarnasFernanda Payan-SchoberMariko IshimoriMichael WeismanMatthias KretzlerCeline C BerthierJeffrey B HodginDawit S DemekeChaim Puttermannull nullMichael B BrennerJennifer H AnolikSoumya RaychaudhuriNir HacohenJudith A JamesAnne DavidsonMichelle A PetriJill P BuyonBetty DiamondFan ZhangJames A LedererDeepak A Rao
Published in: bioRxiv : the preprint server for biology (2024)
Lupus nephritis (LN) is a frequent manifestation of systemic lupus erythematosus, and fewer than half of patients achieve complete renal response with standard immunosuppressants. Identifying non-invasive, blood-based pathologic immune alterations associated with renal injury could aid therapeutic decisions. Here, we used mass cytometry immunophenotyping of peripheral blood mononuclear cells in 145 patients with biopsy-proven LN and 40 healthy controls to evaluate the heterogeneity of immune activation in patients with LN and to identify correlates of renal parameters and treatment response. Unbiased analysis identified 3 immunologically distinct groups of patients with LN that were associated with different patterns of histopathology, renal cell infiltrates, urine proteomic profiles, and treatment response at one year. Patients with enriched circulating granzyme B + T cells at baseline showed more severe disease and increased numbers of activated CD8 T cells in the kidney, yet they had the highest likelihood of treatment response. A second group characterized primarily by a high type I interferon signature had a lower likelihood of response to therapy, while a third group appeared immunologically inactive by immunophenotyping at enrollment but with chronic renal injuries. Main immune profiles could be distilled down to 5 simple cytometric parameters that recapitulate several of the associations, highlighting the potential for blood immune profiling to translate to clinically useful non-invasive metrics to assess immune-mediated disease in LN.
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