Cardiac Allograft Vasculopathy

Abstract
Cardiac allograft vasculopathy (CAV) is an accelerated form of coronary artery disease responsible for the majority of late deaths after cardiac transplantation. Although most consider this complication a manifestation of chronic allograft rejection, it has not been established whether this disease is a consequence of humoral or cell-mediated alloreactivity. Human aortic endothelial cells (HAECs) were isolated from donor aortas obtained at the time of organ acquisition for 52 cardiac allograft recipients. Serum and peripheral blood mononuclear cells were obtained from these 52 allograft recipients at several time points during the first year after transplantation. Lymphocyte proliferation (LP) in response to donor-specific HAECs and alloantibody binding to interferon-gamma-treated donor-specific HAECs were performed and correlated with clinical parameters, including HLA matching, acute cellular rejection, and coronary artery disease on surveillance angiography. Ten of the 52 patients studied had angiographic or autopsy evidence of coronary artery disease in the first posttransplantation year (CAV+ group). The CAV+ group had higher LP responses to their donor HAECs at 1 week, 3 months, and 6 months after transplantation compared with the CAV- group (1 week: 1439 +/- 222 versus 824 +/- 141 counts per minute [cpm], P = .026; 3 months: 1282 +/- 388 versus 884 +/- 94 cpm, P = .07; 6 months: 2504 +/- 635 versus 1540 +/- 209 cpm, P = .036; CAV+ versus CAV-, respectively). Only 8 of the 52 patients had donor-specific alloantibodies, and there was no relation between antibody presence and CAV. Other clinical parameters that correlated with CAV included the level of HLA-DR mismatch and the presence of late acute rejection. CAV is associated with donor-specific cell-mediated alloreactivity to vascular endothelium. Humoral immunity does not appear to have a major role in this disease.