Relationship between CDC cross-match in liver recipients and antibody screening by flow cytometry

Several authors have shown that anti-donor antibodies before liver transplantation are associated with decreased graft survival. The aim of this study was to investigate the relationship between anti-donor antibodies detected by the CDC technique or by FlowPRA, and acute or chronic rejection as well...

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Veröffentlicht in:Transplantation proceedings 2003-08, Vol.35 (5), p.1894-1895, Article 1894
Hauptverfasser: Muro, M, Sánchez-Bueno, F, Marín, L, Torío, A, Moya-Quiles, M.R, Minguela, A, Montes, O, Guerra, N, Montes, M, Pérez-López, M.J, Robles, R, Ramirez, P, García-Alonso, A.M, Parrilla, P, Álvarez-López, M.R
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Several authors have shown that anti-donor antibodies before liver transplantation are associated with decreased graft survival. The aim of this study was to investigate the relationship between anti-donor antibodies detected by the CDC technique or by FlowPRA, and acute or chronic rejection as well as graft survival. Furthermore, we sought to determine whether anti-donor antibodies, detected by the CDC technique, correlated with those discovered by cytometric screening. The acute rejection incidence among patients with complement-dependent cytotoxicity positive CDC cross-match was similar to that for patients with a negative cross-match. None of the patients with a positive cross-match developed chronic rejection. Allograft survival was significantly lower among recipients with a positive T-lymphocyte cross-match. Indeed, the majority of recipients with positive CDC cross-matches displayed graft failures before first postransplant year. The results of a positive FlowPRA determination were concordant with a positive CDC cross-match in 85.71% of cases. Our data demonstrate that pretransplant FlowPRA correlates with the final CDC cross-match results. This finding suggests that in the future prospective pretransplant antibody screening with FlowPRA or CDC techniques may be useful to identify high-risk recipients.
ISSN:0041-1345
1873-2623
DOI:10.1016/S0041-1345(03)00639-0