U. Fideli
National Institutes of Health
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Featured researches published by U. Fideli.
Journal of Heart and Lung Transplantation | 2017
S. Agbor-Enoh; I. Tunc; Iwijn De Vlaminck; U. Fideli; Andrew M. Davis; Karen Cuttin; K. Bhatti; A. Marishta; Michael A. Solomon; Annette M. Jackson; Grace Graninger; Bonnie Harper; Helen Luikart; Jennifer Wylie; Xujing Wang; Gerald J. Berry; Charles Marboe; Kiran Khush; J. Zhu; Hannah A. Valantine
BACKGROUND Use of new genomic techniques in clinical settings requires that such methods are rigorous and reproducible. Previous studies have shown that quantitation of donor-derived cell-free DNA (%ddcfDNA) by unbiased shotgun sequencing is a sensitive, non-invasive marker of acute rejection after heart transplantation. The primary goal of this study was to assess the reproducibility of %ddcfDNA measurements across technical replicates, manual vs automated platforms, and rejection phenotypes in distinct patient cohorts. METHODS After developing and validating the %ddcfDNA assay, we subjected the method to a rigorous test of its reproducibility. We measured %ddcfDNA in technical replicates performed by 2 independent laboratories and verified the reproducibility of %ddcfDNA patterns of 2 rejection phenotypes: acute cellular rejection and antibody-mediated rejection in distinct patient cohorts. RESULTS We observed strong concordance of technical-replicate %ddcfDNA measurements across 2 independent laboratories (slope = 1.02, R2 > 0.99, p < 10-6), as well as across manual and automated platforms (slope = 0.80, R2 = 0.92, p < 0.001). The %ddcfDNA measurements in distinct heart transplant cohorts had similar baselines and error rates. The %ddcfDNA temporal patterns associated with rejection phenotypes were similar in both patient cohorts; however, the quantity of ddcfDNA was significantly higher in samples with severe vs mild histologic rejection grade (2.73% vs 0.14%, respectively; p < 0.001). CONCLUSIONS The %ddcfDNA assay is precise and reproducible across laboratories and in samples from 2 distinct types of heart transplant rejection. These findings pave the way for larger studies to assess the clinical utility of %ddcfDNA as a marker of acute rejection after heart transplantation.
Journal of Heart and Lung Transplantation | 2018
S. Agbor-Enoh; Annette M. Jackson; I. Tunc; Gerald J. Berry; A.B. Cochrane; David Robert Grimm; Andrew Davis; Pali D. Shah; A.W. Brown; Yan Wang; Irina Timofte; Palak Shah; S. Gorham; Jennifer Wylie; Natalie Goodwin; Moon Kyoo Jang; A. Marishta; K. Bhatti; U. Fideli; Y. Yang; Helen Luikart; Z. Cao; Mehdi Pirooznia; J. Zhu; Charles Marboe; Aldo Iacono; S. Nathan; Jonathan B. Orens; H. Valantine; Kiran K. Khush
BACKGROUND Antibody-mediated rejection (AMR) often progresses to poor health outcomes in lung transplant recipients (LTRs). This, combined with the relatively insensitive clinical tools used for its diagnosis (spirometry, histopathology) led us to determine whether clinical AMR is diagnosed significantly later than its pathologic onset. In this study, we leveraged the high sensitivity of donor-derived cell-free DNA (ddcfDNA), a novel genomic tool, to detect early graft injury after lung transplantation. METHODS We adjudicated AMR and acute cellular rejection (ACR) in 157 LTRs using the consensus criteria of the International Society for Heart and Lung Transplantation (ISHLT). We assessed the kinetics of allograft injury in relation to ACR or AMR using both clinical criteria (decline in spirometry from baseline) and molecular criteria (ddcfDNA); percent ddcfDNA was quantitated via shotgun sequencing. We used a mixed-linear model to assess the relationship between and ddcfDNA levels and donor-specific antibodies (DSA) in AMR+ LTRs. RESULTS Compared with ACR, AMR episodes (n = 42) were associated with significantly greater allograft injury when assessed by both spirometric (0.1 liter vs -0.6 liter, p < 0.01) and molecular (ddcfDNA) analysis (1.1% vs 5.4%, p < 0.001). Allograft injury detected by ddcfDNA preceded clinical AMR diagnosis by a median of 2.8 months. Within the same interval, spirometry or histopathology did not reveal findings of allograft injury or dysfunction. Elevated levels of ddcfDNA before clinical diagnosis of AMR were associated with a concurrent rise in DSA levels. CONCLUSION Diagnosis of clinical AMR in LTRs lags behind DSA-associated molecular allograft injury as assessed by ddcfDNA.
Journal of Heart and Lung Transplantation | 2017
S. Agbor-Enoh; I. Tunc; I. De Vlaminck; Andrew M. Davis; S. Gorham; M. Jang; K. Cuttin; U. Fideli; A. Marishta; Jennifer Wylie; Helen Luikart; Kiran K. Khush; H. Valantine
Journal of Heart and Lung Transplantation | 2018
S. Agbor-Enoh; Annette M. Jackson; Gerald J. Berry; A.B. Cochrane; I. Tunc; Moon Kyoo Jang; K. Bhatti; A. Marishta; S. Gorham; Y. Yang; U. Fideli; J. Zhu; Mehdi Pirooznia; David Robert Grimm; Helen Luikart; Pali D. Shah; I. Timofte; Aldo Iacono; Z. Cao; A.W. Brown; Jonathan B. Orens; Charles Marboe; S. Nathan; Kiran K. Khush; H. Valantine
Journal of Heart and Lung Transplantation | 2018
S. Agbor-Enoh; I. Tunc; S. Gorham; Moon Kyoo Jang; U. Fideli; A. Marishta; J. Zhu; Mehdi Pirooznia; Y. Yang; Andrew Davis; David Robert Grimm; Z. Cao; Helen Luikart; Pali D. Shah; I. Timofte; A.W. Brown; Aldo Iacono; S. Nathan; Jonathan B. Orens; Kiran K. Khush; H. Valantine
Journal of Heart and Lung Transplantation | 2018
S. Agbor-Enoh; A.B. Cochrane; Annette M. Jackson; I. Tunc; Pali D. Shah; Z. Cao; A.W. Brown; I. Timofte; A. Marishta; Moon Kyoo Jang; S. Gorham; Y. Yang; U. Fideli; Aldo Iacono; S. Nathan; Jonathan B. Orens; H. Valantine
Journal of Heart and Lung Transplantation | 2018
H. Valantine; Pali D. Shah; Keyur B. Shah; S. Hsu; Erika D. Feller; M.E. Rodrigo; Samer S. Najjar; U. Fideli; S. Gorham; A. Marishta; Y. Yang; Moon Kyoo Jang; I. Tunc; S. Agbor-Enoh
Journal of Heart and Lung Transplantation | 2018
S. Agbor-Enoh; I. Tunc; Moon Kyoo Jang; S. Gorhan; A. Marishta; U. Fideli; Y. Yang; K. Bhatti; Helen Luikart; Mehdi Pirooznia; J. Zhu; Kiran K. Khush; H. Valantine
Journal of Heart and Lung Transplantation | 2017
S.M. Pham; S. Agbor-Enoh; Pali D. Shah; I. Timofte; S. Nathan; Jonathan B. Orens; A.W. Brown; S. Gorham; K. Bhatti; A. Marishta; Moon Kyoo Jang; Y. Yang; U. Fideli; I. Tunc; J. Zhu; Aldo Iacono; H. Valantine
Journal of Heart and Lung Transplantation | 2017
M.E. Rodrigo; S. Agbor-Enoh; S. Gorham; U. Fideli; I. Tunc; Moon Kyoo Jang; Y. Yang; K. Bhatti; A. Marishta; Pali D. Shah; S.M. Pham; Keyur B. Shah; Stuart D. Russell; Erika D. Feller; Samer S. Najjar; H. Valantine