Dr. Kim Solez presents The Banff Foundation for Allograft Pathology and the Future of Transplantation for the ATI Fellows Lecture Series March 11, 2014 at the University of Alberta in Edmonton, Canada.
3. .
The Banff Schema
was first developed
at a meeting of pathologists,
clinicians and surgeons in Banff, Alberta, Canada,
August 2-4, 1991 and has become the worldwide
standard for the interpretation of transplant biopsies.
4. A moderated self-organizing group to define and
standardize organ allograft biopsy interpretation
Aim is to promote international uniformity in reporting
allograft pathology, which is necessary for research,
clinical trials, and standardized patient management
International and inter-disciplinary process with
meetings every 2 years
Mini-review “The Banff Classification Revisited”
(Solez, K. and Racusen, L.C.) appeared in Kidney
International last year
5.
6. 1991 First Conference
1993 First Kidney International publication
1995 Integration with CADI
1997 Integration with CCTT classification
1999 Second KI paper. Clinical practice guidelines. Implantation biopsies,
microwave
2001 Classification of antibody-mediated rejection
Regulatory agencies participating
2003 Genomics focus, ptc cell accumulation scoring
2005 Gene chip analysis. Elimination of CAN, identification of chronic
antibody-mediated rejection
2007 First meeting far from a town called “Banff” – La Coruna, Spain
2009 Working groups. Meeting in Banff, Alberta, Canada for last time
2011 Planning for Banff Foundation begun.
2013 Establishment of Banff Foundation for Allograft Pathology supported
by Roche Organ Transplantation Research Foundation (ROTRF).
7. Given changed regulations and climate surrounding pharma support
we can never again hold the Banff meeting in a resort location.
Future meetings will have to be in regular business destination
cities. We are very grateful for the extraordinary hard work
undertaken by the Brazil organizers this year, a herculean effort!
Vancouver for Banff 2015 in cooperation with the Canadian Society
of Transplantation.
For 2017 and 2019 Barcelona and Pittsburgh will work if the
necessary infrastructure and background stability can be found,
otherwise Edmonton could be considered. The 2001 Banff meeting
in Edmonton was quite successful, uncomplicated.
The many accomplishments of the Banff process can be used to
establish useful partnerships with cities, as we did with Aberdeen in
2003. Many cities offer financial incentives to groups planning
meetings.
8. 86% Kidney clinical
6% Liver clinical
5% Kidney experimental
1% Liver experimental
Most articles are in high quality journals
with impact factor of 3.2 or higher,
one third have impact factors of 6-9.
9. The Banff meeting reports and main meeting
papers have been cited over 5,000 times in the
medical literature.
The 1999 paper The Banff 97 Working
Classification of Renal Allograft Pathology
Kidney International 55(2):713-23, 1999 by
Racusen, Solez, and Colvin et al. is a citation
classic in the field having been cited 2,478
times.
10. Classification begun at 1991 Banff meeting has
become the worldwide standard, and the
consensus process has now extended to all solid
organs. Future meetings are planned every two
years through 2019.
Standardization principles now being extended
from biopsy reporting to tissue typing, imaging, all
the other elements in transplant care.
Classification used in clinical trials, and by the
FDA, mandatory evaluation for drug approvals.
11. Isolated v-lesion
Working Group
IHC Quality Assurance
Working Group
Glomerular Lesion
Working Group
Polyoma Virus Nephropathy
Working Group
Fibrosis Scoring
Working Group
Data-driven & Validated
Refinement of the
Banff Guidelines
Banff Working Groups:
Addressing unmet needs in a data-driven, evidence based approach
Sis et al. 2009 Banff Meeting Report, Am J Transplant. 2010 Mar;10(3):464-71
C4d-Negative ABMR
Working Group
12. Isolated V lesion – Banu Sis and Ed Kraus
Fibrosis scoring – Robert Colvin
Polyoma virus staging – Volker Nickeleit
Glomerular lesion scoring – Mark Haas
Molecular pathology – Phil Halloran
Quality assurance IHC – Michael Mengel
C4d neg. Ab-Mediated Rejection – Banu Sis
History&Impact of Banff Process – Kim Solez
13. Includes analysis of physician facilitation of consensus discussions, seen most
recently in Bob Colvin’s C4d discussions and in Michael Mengel’s organization of
Banff Working Groups. Also includes analysis of future trends and developments.
14. Before 2013 we have
had none beyond
Drs. Racusen and
Solez.
Formed Swiss
foundation legal
entity in 2013, the
Banff Foundation for
Allograft Pathology.
15.
16. To lead development and dissemination of the
international Banff Classification of Allograft
Pathology and to facilitate multidisciplinary,
collaborative research to enhance its scientific
basis and clinical utility to improve the care of
transplant patients.
17. Facilitation of knowledge generation and translation in
transplantation pathology with the ultimate aim to
improve patient outcome
Maintaining the Banff spirit of a multinational,
multidisciplinary consensus group
Fundraising
Guidance and financial support for Working Group
activities
Guidance and financial support for Banff meetings
activities
18. Responsible for annual reports of the Foundation and adherence to
Swiss law
Fiduciary responsibility for foundation funds
Final responsibility for selection and content of Banff meetings
Support and guide Working Group activities
External representation of the Banff process: fundraising, policy
papers, set up, content, and maintenance of a Banff website
Bidirectional communication to membership of the Banff community
Composition:
The BOD consists of 6-9 members, including the Chair.
Members are selected by majority vote of the BOD and serve for a 3 year
term, renewable once. Terms are staggered (3 selected each year).
The Chair and Secretary/Treasurer are selected by a majority vote of the
BOD and serve for a 3 year term, renewable once.
Vacancies filled by majority vote of BOD.
19. Secretary/Treasurer
Responsible for day-to-day business/activities of the Banff Foundation
for Allograft Pathology and annual reporting
Is a member of the board and regularly reports to the other board
members
Prepares annual budget and projections
Monitors expenses
Works closely with the administrative team
Flow and handling of funds through the Foundation:
A foundation should generate funding from whatever sources over its
lifetime, to fulfil its purpose; which in this case would be to run Banff
meetings and to foster advances in organ transplantation
Therefore the recommendation is to run any money e.g. from a
pharmaceutical company into the Swiss Foundation, which then will at
the Board of Trustees instruction transferred to a trusted organising
committee, e.g. a University or Society account from local Banff meeting
organizers , or Banff working group leaders for supporting their activities
20. Organization of meetings together with local organizers
Organization of cross-organ plenary sessions
Program finalization according to input from Organ
Steering committees
Selection of speakers and moderators
Support and coordination of preparation of meeting
reports
Terms of references:
Appointed by the BOD
terms of membership four years (i.e. two meetings), renewable
through majority vote of the board
21. Should engage pathologists and clinicians as well as
representative from major geographic regions (e.g. North
America, South America, Europe, Asia, Africa, Australia)
Fund raising for the meetings and consensus work
should also be scope for the organ steering committee
members
Organization of organ specific sessions: selection of
topics and speakers
Preparation of organ specific meeting reports
Terms of reference:
Leadership appointed by the board of directors for four years (i.e.
two meetings), renewable through majority vote of the board
Otherwise self-organized
22. Future concepts of where
technology is taking us are
incorporated into long term
planning of Banff Process.
Moore’s Law&Eroom’s Law ,
the technological Singularity and
exponential change, exponential
decline in # new drugs per
billion dollars R&D expenditure.
We should proactively address
the challenges of the future, not
be passive victims of events,
keep ahead of the game.
23. The Banff Foundation for Allograft Pathology
Must Remain Youthful and Relevant for the
Future – Must Adapt, Plan for Changes
As the field changes and stem-cell-grown organs replace
transplantation, the organization must change with it
Transplantation may be loosing its luster but luster of the
Banff Foundation for Allograft Pathology can remain
strong. We need to foster sense of community – consider
membership fees.
Need more young people&women. Enhanced cooperation
with other organizations, AST, TTS, Eurotransplant.
As an exercise in alternative realities, at Gala Dinner I
asked participants to consider the very different life of
David Crippen, my counterpart in critical care medicine.
We need to consider changes that large!
24. The spectacular dynamics influencing the
pace of stem generation of organs replacing
transplantation in the future.
There were YouTube videos (now removed) suggesting
that stem cell generation of complex organs in humans
would be routine by 2020.
The dramatic slowdown of new drug approvals (Eroom’s
Law) by the FDA suggests that the FDA is ripe for
disruptive innovation.
However stem cell therapies may be the last area the FDA
will relax regulation in, as unproven bogus stem cell
therapies are causing widespread suffering and protection
of the general public is needed.
The role of the pathologist/laboratory physician will
increase/expand in the coming decades and they will begin
practicing standing up!