Serum-free light chains adjusted for renal function are a potential biomarker for post-transplant lymphoproliferative disorders

2019 
Post-transplant lymphoproliferative disease (PTLD) is a serious complication of solid organ transplantation. As early diagnosis remains challenging, we investigated the utility of serum-free light chain (FLC) and heavy chain/light chain pairs (HLC) as diagnostic biomarkers. Pre-treatment serum FLC and HLC levels were measured in 20 patients at their first diagnosis of B cell PTLD and in 14/20 patients during follow-up. Results were compared to serum FLC/HLC levels of 90 matched PTLD-free transplanted controls. Renal dysfunction was common in both cohorts, and combined FLC levels were often elevated above the conventional upper limit of normal (45.7 mg/L). Combined FLC levels were higher in patients with PTLD than in transplant controls (p = 0.013), and levels above the conventional ULN were associated with PTLD (OR 3.2, p = 0.05). Following adjustment to cystatin C as a marker of renal function an even stronger association was found for a (dimensionless) threshold value of 37.8 (OR 8.9, p < 0.001). In addition, monoclonal proliferation (abnormal FLC ratio, using an established renal range cutoff) was more common in PTLD than in controls (3/20 vs. 2/90, p = 0.04). Following therapy, at the time of protocolised restaging, patients experiencing subsequent sustained complete remission displayed lower FLC levels than those not experiencing such remission (p = 0.053). No relationship with HLC results was seen. Elevated polyclonal FLC levels (especially when adjusted for renal function) and monoclonal proliferation are a potential biomarker for PTLD diagnosis and disease surveillance. However, prospective validation is necessary before FLC measurement should be incorporated in follow-up of transplant recipients and PTLD management.
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