Publication Date:
2023
abstract:
Kidney transplantation (KT) is the optimal therapeutic strategy for patients with end-stage
renal disease. The key to post-transplantation management is careful surveillance of allograft function.
Kidney injury may occur from several different causes that require different patient management
approaches. However, routine clinical monitoring has several limitations and detects alterations only
at a later stage of graft damage. Accurate new noninvasive biomarker molecules are clearly needed
for continuous monitoring after KT in the hope that early diagnosis of allograft dysfunction will
lead to an improvement in the clinical outcome. The advent of “omics sciences”, and in particular
of proteomic technologies, has revolutionized medical research. Proteomic technologies allow us
to achieve the identification, quantification, and functional characterization of proteins/peptides in
biological samples such as urine or blood through supervised or targeted analysis. Many studies
have investigated proteomic techniques as potential molecular markers discriminating among or
predicting allograft outcomes. Proteomic studies in KT have explored the whole transplant process:
donor, organ procurement, preservation, and posttransplant surgery. The current article reviews the
most recent findings on proteomic studies in the setting of renal transplantation in order to better
understand the effective potential of this new diagnostic approach.
Iris type:
1.1 Articolo in rivista
Keywords:
proteomics; kidney transplantation; allograft; rejection; mass spectrometry; biomarker
List of contributors:
Sirolli, Vittorio; Piscitani, Luca; Bonomini, Mario
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