Abstract
The significance of B-cell crossmatching in kidney transplantation is controversial. Recipients (n = 471) transplanted in a single centre from 1987 to 2005 with complete T- and B-cell crossmatch records were studied. Sera from 83 patients transplanted across a positive B-cell crossmatch, with concomitant negative T-cell crossmatch (T-B+) on either current and/or peak sera were studied using Luminex® to determine presence of donor-specific antibodies (DSA). Clinical outcomes of T-B+ patients were compared with 386 T-B- patients. T-B+ predicted vascular (p = 0.01), but not cellular (p = 0.82) or glomerular (p = 0.14) rejection. IgG HLA DSA were found in 33% (n = 27) of the T-B+ patients and were associated with higher risk of any (p = 0.047), vascular (p = 0.01) or glomerular (p < 0.001) rejection at 6 months. Of 27 patients with DSA, 18/21 (86%) were the complement-fixing IgG1 and/or IgG3 subclass antibodies. DSA imposed a statistically significant higher risk of graft loss 5 years posttransplant (1.8 [1.0-3.3], p = 0.045). This study showed that only one-third of positive B-cell crossmatch (BXM) was caused by DSA and was associated with late graft loss. Thus, using BXM to preclude kidney transplantation may potentially disadvantage >60% of patients in whom BXM is not indicative of the presence of DSA. © 2008 The Authors.
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Eng, H. S., Bennett, G., Tsiopelas, E., Lake, M., Humphreys, I., Chang, S. H., … Russ, G. R. (2008). Anti-HLA donor-specific antibodies detected in positive B-cell crossmatches by Luminex® predict late graft loss. American Journal of Transplantation, 8(11), 2335–2342. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1600-6143.2008.02387.x
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