Serum levels of macrophage-colony stimulating factor (M-CSF): a marker of kidney allograft rejection
journal contribution
posted on 2023-05-17, 23:45authored byLe Meur, YL, Leprivey-Lorgeot, V, Mons, S, Matthew JoseMatthew Jose, Dantal, J, Lemauff, B, Aldigier, JC, Leroux-Robert, C, Praloran, V
<p><strong>BACKGROUND</strong>: Macrophage-colony stimulating factor (M-CSF) is the principal factor for survival of monocytes and macrophages that play an important role in allograft rejection. We studied M-CSF serum levels during successful renal transplantation and acute graft rejection.</p> <p><strong>METHODS</strong>: A total of 114 kidney allograft recipients were assessed for M-CSF levels by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA).</p> <p><strong>RESULTS</strong>: M-CSF serum levels were elevated in pre-transplant haemodialysis patients (611+/-355 IU/ml vs 168+/-61 in normal controls, P<0.01). Following successful renal transplantation, M-CSF decreased in the first month, stabilizing at 257+/-222 IU/ml (not significantly different from normal controls) in 52 post-transplant stable patients. There was no correlation between M-CSF level and creatinine clearance. M-CSF levels increased significantly (2-5 times) during biopsy-proven acute rejection episodes in 20 of 25 patients. All rejection episodes were successfully treated and serum M-CSF decreased rapidly to pre-rejection levels in 17/20 patients. In contrast, in five patients with cyclosporin toxicity and four patients with other causes of allograft dysfunction, M-CSF serum levels did not change.</p> <p><strong>CONCLUSIONS</strong>: M-CSF serum level might be a specific marker of acute rejection. The source of increased production during rejection warrants further investigation, with infiltrating T cells and resident kidney cells being likely candidates.</p>