作者
Olivier Brugière,D. Mouren,Julie Trichereau,Alexandre Vallée,Isabelle Kuzniak,Sandrine Hirschi,Benjamin Renaud‐Picard,Martine Reynaud‐Gaubert,Ana Nieves,Vincent Bunel,Jonathan Messika,Xavier Demant,Julie Macey,Jérôme Le Pavec,Gaëlle Dauriat,Christel Saint-Raymond,Loïc Falque,Jean‐François Mornex,Adrien Tissot,Aurore Foureau,Aurélie Le Borgne Krams,Véronique Bousseau,A. Magnan,C. Picard,Antoine Roux,Edgardo D. Carosella,Joël LeMaoult,Nathalie Rouas‐Freiss
摘要
Survival after lung transplantation (LTx) still remains limited by chronic lung allograft dysfunction (CLAD), thought to represent a form of chronic rejection. We investigated whether the immune checkpoint HLA-G/ILT2 expressed by peripheral T-cell subpopulations could predict CLAD.We used data for 150 LTx recipients from COLT (Cohort-For-Lung-Transplantation) cohort with ≥1 available blood sample at 1-, 6-, or 12-months post-Tx. Analysis of T cells by flow cytometry focused on the ILT2 receptor of HLA-G and other markers (CD57, CD25, CD127). T-cell subset analyses compared stable patients and those with CLAD at 3 years post-LTx.With data for 78 stable and 72 CLAD patients, among 21 T-cell subsets expressing ILT2, only CD4+CD57+ILT2+ T cells were associated with outcome. At 1-month post-Tx, low proportion of CD4+CD57+ILT2+ T cells was associated with reduced 3-year incidence of CLAD (CD4+CD57+ILT2+ T cells ≤ first IQR [25%] vs > first IQR, log-rank test, p = 0.028). Furthermore, the incidence of CLAD was higher with >2.6- vs ≤2.6-fold increased proportion of CD4+CD57+ILT2+ T cells over the first year post-LTx (3-year freedom frequencies: 27% [95%CI: 8-50] vs 64% [95%CI: 48-77] (log-rank test, p = 0.014). On multivariable analysis, increased proportion of CD4+CD57+ILT2+ T cells over the first year predicted CLAD (hazard ratio 1.25; 95%CI: 1.09-1.44; p = 0.001). Focusing on CD4+CD57+ILT2+ T cells, we demonstrated ex vivo that they are cytotoxic CD4+ T cells, selectively inhibited by HLA-G.Our data suggest that an early increase of CD4+CD57+ILT2+ T cells after LTx may be associated with CLAD onset.