Sensitization in Transplantation: Assessment of Risk (STAR) 2017 Working Group Meeting Report.
Anat R TamburPatricia CampbellFrans H ClaasSandy FengHoward M GebelAnnette M JacksonRoslyn B MannonElaine F ReedKathryn J TinckamMedhat AskarAnil ChandrakerPatricia P ChangMonica ColvinAnthony-Jake DemetrisJoshua M DiamondAnne I DipchandRobert L FairchildMandy L FordJohn J FriedewaldRonald G GillDenis GlotzHilary GoldbergRamsey HachemStuart KnechtleJon KobashigawaDeborah J LevineJoshua LevitskyMichael MengelEdgar MilfordKenneth A NewellJacqueline G O'LearyScott PalmerParmjeet RandhawaJohn SmithLaurie SnyderRandall C StarlingStuart C SweetTimucin TanerCraig J TaylorSteve WoodleAdriana ZeeviPeter NickersonPublished in: American journal of transplantation : official journal of the American Society of Transplantation and the American Society of Transplant Surgeons (2018)
The presence of preexisting (memory) or de novo donor-specific HLA antibodies (DSAs) is a known barrier to successful long-term organ transplantation. Yet, despite the fact that laboratory tools and our understanding of histocompatibility have advanced significantly in recent years, the criteria to define presence of a DSA and assign a level of risk for a given DSA vary markedly between centers. A collaborative effort between the American Society for Histocompatibility and Immunogenetics and the American Society of Transplantation provided the logistical support for generating a dedicated multidisciplinary working group, which included experts in histocompatibility as well as kidney, liver, heart, and lung transplantation. The goals were to perform a critical review of biologically driven, state-of-the-art, clinical diagnostics literature and to provide clinical practice recommendations based on expert assessment of quality and strength of evidence. The results of the Sensitization in Transplantation: Assessment of Risk (STAR) meeting are summarized here, providing recommendations on the definition and utilization of HLA diagnostic testing, and a framework for clinical assessment of risk for a memory or a primary alloimmune response. The definitions, recommendations, risk framework, and highlighted gaps in knowledge are intended to spur research that will inform the next STAR Working Group meeting in 2019.